LATEST LOCAL BRILLIANT BASEBALL WINS FOR KINGSTON Neither 8ide Registered An Error When Locals De- | feated Belleville 2-1. Kingston defeated Belleville at the Fair Grounds last night 2-1 in a game that will be long remembered | locally. Not an error was registered | in the pitching duel which terminat- | ed In a victory for Gallagher over | Qulette--and a well-deserved ome. | Kingston's veteran southpaw has | seldom been seen in better form. He * was in contro! of the situation at all times and the six hits secured by the | visitors were well scattered. Seven of them went by the strikeout route | and not a walk was issued. Oulette {ssued no walks but was hit harder, two triples and a single in the first inning sending Teepell and Batstone | over the rubber for the only and win- | ning counters scored by Kingston. # In the second Purvis cracked out a | two-bagger and went to third on Rice's out at first. Gallagher laid | down a bunt and hiked for first.! Peeny Mills made the throw to first] and took the return in time to tag | Purvis at the plate. In the fifth] singles by Gallagher and Teepell| made a bad outlook for Belleville but | Compeau grounded to Williams and | Gallagher was out at third on a] force, It was in the eighth that Belleville became most dangerous. Meagher | singled and was sacrificed to second | . by Alec. Weir. Oulette filed to . 'Cherry. Vern. Weir singled and] scor Meagher but was caught off | frst and tagged out by Daley in a | play which required five assists-- Teepell to Rice to Soverville to Pur-| vis to Rice to Daley, In the ninth Hagerman knocked off a nice two-| bagger and Harry Mills came up. a dangerous batter, with two out. His | pop fly to Somerville ended the game. The work of Gallagher and Rice was outstanding and W. Mills, in his cld place behind the bat, wielded a w'cked glove. Meagher and Williams took a big end of the infield work for Belleville, Somerville did the heavy work in the infield for Kingston with a total of eight chances, two of them put- outs. Batstone had four chances and Compeau but one, The crowd was a bumper one and went home in fine spirits. It gave encouragement to the local players and the result was noticeable at once. Not a man passed first for Belle- wille until the fourth innings and only two players reached second. Neither Gallagher nor Oulette issued a walk during the game. The league standing is: .T Kingston Peterboro Oshawa Belleville Game to-day--Peterboro at Osha- wa. A perfect sheet: 0 0 1 1 + Belleville. AB R V. Weir, ss 0 Ross, cf W. Mills, ¢ Hagerman H. Mills. Williams, 3b Meagher, 2b A Weir, rt .... OQulstte, p c © ) fo. Fs atais sin » | mormworoaw~d - | core oo) >) ODO OWN | NONOHONO WH el coool * - 3 RI © ODE Teepell, 1b .... Compeau, ss ... Batstone, 3b Somerville, 2b .. Cherry, ct Daley, rf Purvis, 1b Rice, ¢ Gallagher, p ... DD eT SUDO NNOO cocococooocol xA. Weir out for interfering with ball batted by himself in third. Summary. Three-base hits, Batstone, Cherry; two-base hits, Hagerman, Purvis; earned runs, Kingston 2, Belleville 1; sacrifice hits, A. Weir; struck out, by Oulette 4, by Gallagher 7; left. on bases, Belleville 4, Kingston 4; double plays, W. Mills to H. Mills to W. Mills; umpires, Hallinan and Benson; time of game, 1.30. British scientists are trying to find out what prehistoric weather was "like. The kind we have now ought to be sufficient worry. Buy A Real Boat Now! cept terms for the balance, on any of our three styles of Disappear Propeller Boats--the best of small power boats. The boats are sturdy, strong and seaworthy and the patented pro- pelier disappears into the hull to allow passage over shoals and obs . stacles. 1 Prices 4178 and upwards-- thus. $68.75 cash secures immediate Qelivery. Write for illustrated catalogue or better still call in and select one. LTD, {ran susarEpAnIIG tom | muses 5 | cepts without a murmur, believing it CITY LEAGUE Two city league games are carded for to-day. This afternoon the Vic- torias, with their snappy little team, will make another determined -at- tempt to take a fall out of Circle- Six and hope to be succes&ful this time, This evening the Gananoque Or- phans come back again and will meet Hussars, the league leaders. Major Mackenzie's troop must get moving if it is to keep in the running at all znd the Orphans will work their bardest this evening. Hussars will have a strong lineup in the field and intend to hold their lead. B ASEBAL SCORES FRIDAY'S GAMES. International League, Syracuse 4, Reading 1 Syracuse 4, Reading 3 Buffalo 7, Jersey City 6 Baltimore 13, Rochester 8 Toronto at Newark, rain, National League. New York 6, Boston 1 Philadelphia 10, Brooklyn 1 Pittsburgh 9, Cincinnati 4 Michigan and Ontario. Grand Rapids 7, Hamilton 6 Bay City 7, Muskegon 0 Bay City 4, Muskegon 3 Kalamazoo 5, Saginaw 2 Flint 3, London 3 American League. Cleveland 11, Detroit 9 Washington 3, Philadelphia (12 innings) New York at Boston, rain. Chicago at St. Louis, rain. 2 TIMELY TIPS TO AMATEURS SAYS BABE ADAMS Pitcher, Pittsburg Nationals. I have always believed that a smooth pitching motion was the first asset every pitcher should possess. Nothing takes more out of a pitcher than a jerky motion that places most of the strain on the arm and loses the benefit of the follow- through body motion. Next in importance is the knowl- edge on the part of the pitcher that he has eight players in the field, wildly anxious to help himi to vie- tory by doing their part. Victory is the thing. I take far more joy out of a 9 to 8 victory, made possible by my team mates batting, than a 1 to 0 defeat in which I have pitched brilliantly. A pitcher must not try to carry the entire burden, Don't think you must strike out every player. ERRORS AND BONERS By Billy Evans Mistakes 'in baseball are divided into two classes, physical and men- tal, The physical error is the fallure to stop'a ground ball, catch a fly or make an accurate throw. The mental error is the pulling of a dumb play, such as failing to run out a hit, neglecting to touch a base, throwing the ball to the wrong place, ete. In other words a mental error is a "bonehead" play due to the failure of the brain to properly function. To the average baseball fan a mis- take is a mistake, whether it be physical or mental. If the failure to stop an easy grounder, or catch a puny fly, loses a ball game, the fan can "razz" quite as merrily as if the loss of the game was due to failure to think. Therein the fan and the ball player differ widely. The ball player gives no thought to a physical error. It is regarded as part of the game. so fails teammates, It is the mental error that makes for tobasco conversation on a ball club. Big league players rave at mental slips. The player who pulls cne draws his share of criticism, when he reaches the bench. Naturally nothing hurts a ball player more than to be "razzed"" by the crowd because of a physical er- ror. Under his breath he pans the fans as hard as they are after him. Criticism for a mental error he ac- deserved. It is a rather interesting fact that a majority of the physical errors made by major league ball players are on the easier chances. 'Most dia- mond athletes prefer playing a drive that causes them to get into motiom, rather than handling a ball hit di- rectly at them. I onve heard a great infielder say that a slow bounding ball, batted by a fast runner, cailing for a swift ac- curate throw after proper handling of the ball, was to him the most dif- ficult of all plays. To the average spectator such a play looks so soft, that to see a star | ed by the player. { balloting ball games on belligerent | on their Roman holiday 40,000 gore- | | bounce. The player who | is never criticized by his fall down on the play, seems ridicu- As a matter of fact, the player ig THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG SPORTING criticized more on the plays that look easy, although not always so regard- | So, Mr. Fah, if you want to win | the approval of the player, spare him when he makes a physical error, but go the limit in "razzing" him. when he pulls a bone. NUT CKER IY rememasmnsiened WILLIAMS Ancient and charming custom of JOE basis of non-skid left hooks and | self-lubricating right crosses is being | revived, Revived is pretty and proper lan- guage. After recent massacre be-| tween Yanks and Tygers, pulmotors, Big Bens, diabolical rays, and a| Hiram Johnson bellows were need- ed to revive infuriated athletes, This was putting soup spots on other vest. Ball games these days are duller than keynoter's speech, and usually it's the customers who have to be revived. Might not be an uncouth idea at that if the boys replaced the lively ball with the lively fist. One Punch O'Goofty can remem- | ber when knuckle parties were as | much a part of the game as left field | foul line and unmuzzled hot dogs. "In those days," remarks Mr. 0'Goofty, "everything went, includ- | ing your ears, if you didn't duck quick enough. "They had a K.O. column in the box score, and the summary would read: "Knockdowns, Kelly, 3; black eyes; Sweeney, 5; teeth lost, McGraw, | 6; hit by pitcher (with iron pipe), | McGurdy, Chyonski, Kopoleskie and Ryan. Left on bases (unconscious), Murphy, Cohen, Reilly, Schwartz. Arrests, 48. Time: 90 days and costs." Day after Yanks and Tygers put bathed fans stormed park. This shows noble, upstanding American taxpayers are against rowdyism in all chaste forms, and Judge Landis' system of dignifying baseball is just what the doctor ordered. Turnstile fish at ball games don't care who wins as long as home en- semble doesn't lose, or how many fights are started as long as home talent finishes 'em. And best way to finish them, they hold, is with long swinging right hand to the Van Dyke meadows. The jolly old annoyance is drift- ing back to the moist medieval days when batsman was out on first -- Only difference now is that you must crash him hard enough to make bounce. . Questions. 1. With the score tied, ninth inn- ing, pitcher fills the bases. He is taken out. Batsman hits safely on substitute pitcher, driving winning run across plate. What pitcher is charged with loss of game?--C. D. Y. 2. There is a runner on second base. The batsman hits a ground ball that strikes the base umpire working back of the pitcher on the foot. The pitcher recovers ball and throws runner out at third base. The umpire ruled that the runner who tried to go from second to third and was retired at that base should return to second. He ruled a dead ball and made the batsman hit over. The batsman on his second chance doubled, scoring the runner from second. What is the correct ruling? --M. D, Answers. In the case you cite, the pitcher who put the runners on the bases is charged with the defeat, even though the hit that scored the winning run was made off the substituted pitcher. Scorers always strictly follow such a procedure in hadling such situa- tions. 5 2. When the umpire was hit by a batted ball, play was immediately suspended. The batsman was entitl- ed to first base. No runners can ad- vance on such a play except forced, therefore the runner originally on second should have simply remained on that base. The umpire erred mm making the batsman hit over. Many a married man sympathizes with the British Labor government, which has responsibility without power. Rk \ Judging from photographic evi- dence the "best dressed woman" is the one that dresses very littie. » GENERAL REVIEWS ls esa mrs st Sr att Fa ane I, SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1924. NE TIMELY COMMENTS Bill Coles, London boy, is one of the most promising track riders in Canada. The siege gunmer in golf is ple- turesque rather than powerful, and in recent years has not been' consple- | uous among the successful. The | main honors have been going to the | player who sacrified length for ac- curacy, and romance for routine. Max Marston is this type of play- | er. There are many amateurs who hit longer balls off the tee, but few | who are straighter through the | green. This kind of golf brought | Marston the amateur championship | last summer. Cyril Walker, recent winner of the open, is much the same type of golf- er. Walker hits a long ball, but he | hardly ranks: with the seige gun-| ners. His chief interest is centered | in keeping the ball in the middle of | the fairway. At Oakland Hills the New Jersey professional probably played fewer shots from rough and traps than any | other player. This, and his ability | to control the ball in a quartering | J He has won a series of races at boro Velodrome Saturday night meets. a gale, accounted for his triumph. A long ball that you can't control | is about as useful as an ice pick in the tropics. The longest hitter in this year's open was young Johnny Rogers of Dayton, Rogers hits a tee shot every bit as far as Bob Mac- donald used to. But it is not always straight, and that's one reason why Rogers finished with 314, exactly 17 strokes behind the leader. Ranking next to Rogers in 'prodi- | swatting was Jess Guilford, | gious the Boston amateur, and Jesse was | even farther back with 317. Chick Fivans has the right idea on tee shots, which is this: Go after dis- tance only when it is necessary. The siege gunner, on the other goes after it all the time. On a course of moderate length, Evans simply shortens his back swing. On long courses, such as Flossmoor was last year, he length- ens it. This sounds easy, and is, if you have mastered cate, subtle operation, which consists in getting the wrists, arms and body into the 'hit at the right second. A record crop of peaches is predicted, berries and notwithstand- | ing that never once were we told! that all fruit was killed by the frost. the Scar-| hand, timing, a dell-| KODAK DAYS ed a All prices--all models. Get one for the holiday. All sizes in Films. We do printing. developing and We do it well. Treadgold Spor 88 PRINCESS ST. ing Goods Co PHONE 529. FOR SALE SEMI-BUNGALOW--Solid brick, 6 rooms, 8 bedrooms, lights, gas, 8 piece bath, hot water heating, fireplace, hard wood floors, wall and floor plugs, nice verandah, extra wide lot, 210 feet deep, beau- tiful lawn 60 ft. from house to street. This place can be bought for much less thon cost price if taken this week. One of the finest loca- tions in city, Please enquire at office for price and location. M. B. TRUMPOUR 'Phone 704 or 2072w 270 PRINCESS STREET sist ES ---- ------------ By starting now and working] A St. Louis man claims to have a | every day on it you may get your | dog that can sing. No doubt his re- Christmas shopping done early this| pertiore is made up entirely of bar- year, caroles. 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