Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Oct 1922, p. 10

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. DIFFERENT RUGBY | GAMES FOR TO-DAY Various Organizations of the Province. There are many rugby matches eduled for today in the different In the O.R.F.U, the Univer- of Toronto team will try thelr inds ageinat Parkdale, Queen's and fll meet in the senior intercol- at Montreal In the Inter- ncial the Argonauts will try 'o the Tigers in their den, and will go to Ottawa to try asions with the Senators. All will be watched with (Interest, the teame are fairly evenly match- this year and will fight hard for prem CY. In Kingston there will be one jun- . the Riéhardson Stadium. The re. i'n game of this will be played on Nednesday next before the imter- x » fixture amd the second inter: | med match on Saturdey next. ~~ Limestones are still keeping qufet, 'f but working hard aM the time. Shaw tf and Adams, former Queen's players, bolstered the line somewhat, all the other men have improved through practice. A special wire will be Tun into the Btadtom and the progress of the y i's-MoG4ll game reported for [the benefit of the fans at the junior me there. ---- * Boccer Today. Queen's and Kingston City will the first soccer match of the sea- on Queen's Lower Campus this irnoon. The city team has gath- i together a strong eleven anil ile game will furnish an estimate as 'whether or mot the tricolor will be £0 retain the Whig cup this sea- again. They will have plenty of petition. | COLLEGE RUGBY "ITEAMS IN ACTION STRAND _Alse Te-day's Results Two No-hit Games Pitched During the 1922 Season Two no-hit games, the seventh |and eighth in the history of the ma« jor leagues, were the pitching fea- tures in 1922 baseball, a season marked by heavy hitting, according to semi-official figures. Charlie Ro- bertson of the Chicago Americans, sprang from a rookie's lowly estate to baseball fame, by turning back the Detroit Tigers without a hit on April 30th, and Jess Barnes, the New York Giants' veteran, enteren the hall of fame May 7th, a week later, by pitching almost perfect ball against Philadelphia. There were two one-hit games in the National League and none in the American. There were thirteen two-hit games in the American against five in the National, and sixteen three-hit con- tests in the American compared to thirteen in' the National. Bill Doak of the St. Louis Nationals twirled both the one-hit games, the first on May 11th against the Giants, and the second on July 13th against Philadelphia. KIRKWOOD TO REMAIN, Trick Shot Golfer in U. 8, for An. other Year. Australian golfers who were plan- ning to get a glimpse of their fave orite, Joe Kirkwood, during tha winter months, will be forced to wait a year, for it became known yesterday that the trick shot artist had abandoned his proposed excur- slon home for this year at least. He and Hagen will cut for the Pacific Coast around the first of the year, and after a series of matches out there will make their return via the south, participating in a number >f tournaments en route to the east. They plan to leave for the British open championship some time in April, and they will then return to this country for the national open and begin their world's tour, which they planned for this season. The centre on a football team must hold the ball flat on the ground with its long axis at right angles to the line of scrimmage, on amid After The Evening Motor Drive Stop in at The Savoy Lunch. Quick cour- . teous servite is our motto. The best food leasant surroundings.' Savoy Dairy Lunch 24-HOUR SERVICE A Few Doors Below Grand Opera House "SPORTING & a comic hit. | "THEM DAYS IS GONEFOREVER?" You not only read it; you sing it. Try It on your piano. Watch nightly for this big ca "THERE'S A LONG LONG TRAIL A-BINDING." COME ON, LET'S HURRY, JOSEPHINE - OUR TRAIN PULLS OUT AT TEN -- : YOU CAN'T EXPECT US, THESE GOWNS, TO WALK AS nN YOU WOMEN ORTA HAVE MORE SENSE - AND WEAR SHORT SKIRTS AGAIN -- MILLER HUGG 1S NOT BEING RETRED Yankee Owners Make Emphat- Ic Denial of Rumor to This Effect. Official denials that Miller Hug- gins is to lose his job as manager of the Yankees and unofficial intim- ations that there will be a thorough going shakeup in the ranks of the team, were the chief happenings of an otherwise quiet world's series af- termath on Monday. The Giants met at noon In the Cut Yolh-i5e for those smokers F MAD] \ACos . cut fine or who roll their own BRINGING UP FATHER clubhouse and voted on how the winning melon should be cut, the re- sult being that each full share will amount to $4,400. The Yanks held a similar financial conclave, but these monied events took second place to the dire rumors floating about concerning Huggins and Lis managership.- < Later in the afternoon Colonel Jacob Ruppert, part owner of the American League team put the quie- tus on the report by saying that tha job was Hugging' to take if he wanted it. "If Miller wants to manage the Yanks next year," the colonel de- clared, "the position will be thers waiting for him, I've heard reports today that Eddie Collins is to be ob- tained from Chicago in a trade and placed at the head of our team. Na- turally, Collins would be a distinct addition to any club, but I repeat what I said before--Miller Huggins can manage the Yanks again if he wants to." However, there still remains a question whether Huggins will want to manage any more baseball teams. In the last two years his health has been bad; -it has been better this season than last, but the fact re- mains that Huggins is not a well man and undoubtedly would wel- come a graceful way in which he could retire from the Yanks manag- ership. Moreover, his family has vi- gorously opposed his staying in baseball because of his poor health. Baseball men were evenly divid- ed today on the question. They de- clared that the failure of the Yanks to win even one game from the Gi- ants was the last straw, and that the element which has bitterly opposed Huggins and worked against him will now finally prevail. Other crit- ics took the view that a manager who had won two successive pen- nants could not very well LJ releas- ed, even despite his failures in world series. Saskatoon Get Roddy Smith. Official announcement is made of the signing of "Roddy" Smith, the Selkirk defence star, by the Saska- togn Crescents. x OTTAWA HOCKEY PLAN ABANDONED New Arena Will Not Be Erect= ed This Year as Con- templated. The proposition launched by cer- tain Interests in Ottawa some time SATURDAx, vorunnm Yu, Tv2. BADMIN1O / 70 BOXING Pay Your Street Car Fares to us for seven months and then you pay no more. SEVEN CENT FARES or 4 for 25c., will make a big difference in ~ paying for a Bicycle. It will cost you over Six Dollars per month to ride the Street Cars. s THIS WILL PAY for a BICYCLE in SEVEN MONTHS at $10.00 CASH and $6.00 PER MONTH, and then 'you save $6.00 per month, as a Massey Bicycle will last you 10 years at least. Some riders in Kingston have used a Massey for 18 years and still running good. START TO SAVE MONEY. Treadgold Sporting Goods Co 88 PRINCESS ST. PHONE 529. ago for the erection of a stadium which In the winter was presumably to be used as the home of the Ot- tawa Hockey Club, at the southwast corner of King Edward avenue and York streets, has, it is understood, been abandoned. The option on the land has lapsed, it is sald. A general meeting of the share- holders is to be called shortly, and it is understood that the proposition will be advanced that a summer amusement park, somewhat similar to Dominion park, Montreal, will ba operated in the south end of the city. - The stadium project, as originally promoted, called for an outlay of arotind $300,000 for a very large modern building, including an up- to-date artificial ice-making plant. U.S. ATHLETES INVITED, fetes will have an opportunity %o compete in Sweden next summer if the invitation reached by, the Ama- {eur Athletic Union, New York, is ac- cepted. The Swedish Athletic Asso- ciation notified A.A.U. officials that a sot of international games would be held at Gothenburg, July 1st to 16¢h to commemorate the 300th an- ditversary of the establishment of that eity. A stadium to seat some 20,000 'spectators has been erected, and a fast track and fle installed. Al running events will be at metric dis- tances. The programme és modelled Alter the Olympic games, and will be bed under the rules of the Inter national Amateur Athletic Federa~ tion. -------- Now and then you and I see a very goot hat on the apology for a man. v 3" 32 se a) RATTAN CHAIRS AND ROCKERS ,.ee......$10, $12 to $30 SETTEES ...e00c... (Upholstered in Tapestry) CHESTERFIELDS ..cosmecu sossmecssssosess 885 to $200 EASY CHAIRS .... omens woceomecsscs ase vess $12.50 up LIBRARY TABLES ceacess on messsmmeoss nee. .$10 {0 $55 ROBT. J. REID LEADING UNDERTAKER Btreet. 230 Ambulance Call 577w. MALGIE - OLD LY SICK OVER THE NEWS OF US GOWN' TO CHINA OF OUS HE WUZ A GREAT FRIEND INTHE OLDEN DAY I THINK IT WILL BREAK HIS HEART IF WE LEAVE. HiM =D. HATE TO BE AwAY AN' HEAR, ANY BAD NEWS x ABOLIT HIM = OH. DON'T SAY ANY MORE!

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