Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Aug 1920, p. 9

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MONDAY, AUGUST 23, 1920. E-- at « arning Our stock of BICYCLES is getting low, as people who know a bargain when they see one, have bought the quality BICYCLES we are selling at reduced prices, s6 we won't have to WE NEED THE ROOM-- carry them over the coming winter, YOU NEED THE BICYCLE. A Bleycle trouble and expense. saves time, Leave for work later and get there on tiie. Home for dinner and supper and down town at night, or out for a hike if you like. pt with That's possible one of our" better Bicycles. > So why not drop in and look 'em over----the best stock of BICYCLES in the city, and at bargain prices t your pocket book. We sell on easy every Bicycle we sell 00--prices that won't put a strain on terms if you so desire, and guarantee A pleasure trip for the whole family--twice as easy as walking--three times as fast. Cpme on {n soon--your size may be gone if you delay. TREADGOLD SPORTING GOODS CO. "THE PLACE TO GET THAT RECORD" 88 PRINCESS STREET 3 3 Telephone 529. All kinds of repair work PHONE 688 Davie & Barrett PLUMBING, HEATING and TINSMITHING 203 'WELLINGTON ST. promptly dttended to. The Hot Weather is Here at Last WE HAVE A FEW FANS LEFT WHICH WE WILL SELL = AT COST. "HALLIDAY ELECTRIC (0. Cor. King and Princess - - ne Phone 94 THE DA ILY BRIT 9 World of Sport | | A PONIES VI08S ONCE MORE | DEFEAT THE BROWNVIELE, N. ] Y. TEAM BY 7-4. The Game on Saturday Was Not Up To the Usual Standard--There Was Ragged Play in Spots. Ponies emerged from Saturday's | game with brownville, N.Y., another victory tagging at their Leels. At least they 'won the game, but it | could -not. be called a very great| | victory. The Visitors were nothing to tell tlie neighbors zbout, and not even much of an improvement on the Ogdensburg team who playéd her Wednesday evening last. The only marked difference was that Brownville did not carry a regiment of would-be pitchers, contenting themselves with Cooke, a south-paw, for the full nine innings, Gallagher was back in the box for Ponies but did not cover himself with mud and glory, either in the box or at the bat. He was taken | out after the seventh and replaced by Cherry. It was not so much that the Brownville bunch were hitting him but he could not find the plate, and runs might as well be brought in by hits as walked in. It makes the game more interesting for the spectators anyway. Cherry lived up to his reputation when he came in from centre field for the last two innings. He al- lowed runs nor hits and threw stead- ily all the time, just as Walsh told him to. There should be better games next week, in fact there are sure to be. | Alexandria Bay are here next Wed- | nesday and have managed to satis-| fy the fans so far. Friday and Sat- urday St. Andrew's of Toronto are scheduled. It is hard to say what they will turn out to be be, but they sound rather good. A look' over the layers who have | apeared with the various outside | teams visiting Kingston this season | makes one think that there must be | quite a freemasonary of baseball | clubs in expistence. Two Weldons | and a Halburt were here with the | Brownville team and both names | have appeared frequently with other | teams playing here. Probably St. | Andrew's will introduce some new | material. The line-up Saturday: Brownville--Craig 2b; Deloche | 8s; Halburt 3b; N. Weldon B. | Weldon ¢; Cook p; Beatty 1b;"Bec- ker 1f, Sutton Tif. Ponies--Spoor 3h; Twigg 2b; Daly 1b; Cherry cf and p; Saunders 8s; Coyne rf; Stewart If; Walsh c; Gallaher p apd cf. The score by innings: R. H. Brownville +.3.000100300--4 5 Ponies 213000010--7 J "Ympire--George Sullivan. ¥ Time of Game--90 minutes. REGIOPOLIS JUNIORS WIN Defeat the Young Irishmen By 13 Runs to 10. The Junior League game between oung Irishmen 'and Regiopolis had a higher score than the senior game on Saturday, but it was per- haps a better exhibition of baseball. It was certainly was more interest- ing. One of these days some of | thease youngsters of the baseball | circle are golug to turn out and tril some of the senior teams, and that without mulh trouble, if the big fel- Nasty Throat Droppings Catarrhal Discharge' Quickly Cured. Doctors recommend Catarrhozone, it is nature's own cure. It drives out the germs, heals sore spots, cleans away every vestige of Catarrhal lows do not soon get a mdve .on them. There are heavy hitting and good fielding on both sides, and heavy scoring throughout the game. These smaller. calibre teams. are like the old-timers. They do not depend en- tirely on the pitcher, and the filed- ers have quite a lot of erercise gas a result, which does them not one bit of harm. The Irishmen worked hard and pulled - out frour runs in the last inning but their oponents had been working all the way with scores now end then, to say nothing of five runs in. the eighth, and their lead could not be faken down. The line-up: : Irishmen---Fitzgerald ¢; McKay 1b; Devlin 2b; Johnson ss; . Fowler 3b; McCulla If; Meredith rf; Ada cf; Bennett p. Regiopolis--Larushe cf; Halpin rf; McCabe If; James 3b; Quinn c; Thompson ss; Kehoe 2b; James p; Lawless 1b. The score by innings: Irishmen 101201104--10 Regiopolis ..211011151--13 Umpire--Thos. O'Neill. 13 13 BASEBALL ON SATURDAY, International League, Baltimore 6, Toronto 5. Jersey City 3-2, Rochestur 2-4. Buffalo 3, Reading 2. Akron 4, Syracuse 2. National League. Philadelphia 3-0, Pittsburg" 1-5. Brooklyn 4, Cincinnati 0. New York 8, Chicago 3. St. Louis 6, Boston 4. ---- American League. Boston 12-4, Cleveland 0-0. Detroit 10, New York 3. Cfihicago 5, Washington 2. CLAUDE DIXON BACK WITH POP WATKINS'S CLAN. Claude Dixon, star catcher and batter of the Havana Red Sox in 1914, has rejoined Pop Watkins's outfit at Ogdensburg, according td word received from the dusky pilot today. Besides Dixon, he has also regained Thompson, another mem- ber of the combination several years ago which was considered the fastest club jie ever managed in his | 20 years as a baseball leader. Pop declares that he is after the championship of Northern New York and he has strengthened his team this year in an effort to cop the title. Both Dixon and Thomp- son are certain to prove valuable additions to his aggregation of toss- |? ers. Concerning the club Pop writes: "Up until now my team has been a mediocre club but I believe that I can compete with any team at the present time for the championship of Northern New York parring none. The Speed of Yachts. Most people do not read yachting news in the ordinary way. As a con- sequence, when they eoncentrate up- on a big event like the race for the America Cup they are frankly aston- ished that the entrants do not, when given a stiff breeze, get up a bigger speed than is the case. io 'The truth is that the finest racing yacht cannot touch a hig sailing ship in the matter of speed. The log book of the clipper James Baines «f 8.30 p.m. on June 18thA{1856, showed that he was doing 21 knots. On that date she saile' 418 knots in 23 hours and 23 minutes. This is probably a re- cord- for speed under sail. In racing trim, famous yachts like the Vigil- ant, Defender, Columbia and the Shamrocks have claimed to do as much as 14 knots in short spurts. Hagerman 'of Woodstock Leaves for Buffalo. Woodstock loses one of its best- known athletes next week, when Ernie Hagerman, for two years pro- | minent in sports, leaves for Buffalo, ISH WHIG A AA A A Ani THE FRENCH CHAMPION | GIVEN THE PREFERENCE | The International Sporting Club | { has announced the signing of a con- tract for a 15-round decision bout | | between Georges Carpentier, Europ- | ean champion, and Battling Levin- | sky, world's light heavyweight cham- | pion, to be held at Ebbets Field, »oklyn, October 12, The agreement which was conclud- {ed secretly several days ago, was | signed by\ Jack Curley, the boxing! | premoter.Jacting for Francois Des-| champs, manager for the French ichampion, and Dan Morgan, acting for Levinsky. gThe amount of the prizes to be offered and whether the bout will take place in the after- noon or at night will be announced later. Officials 'of the : International Sporting Club said that they were offering the Carpentier-Levinsky bout in preference to a proposed meeting 'between world's champion Jack Dempsey and "Knockout" Bill Brennan, who recently signed to box | at some undetermined date. A quest- { ionnaire sent to the club members showed returns favoring the appear- ance of Carpentier by a majority of approximately 5 to 1. Ebbets Field, where the contest is to take place, has a normal seat- ing capacity of 28,0 but the pro- moters declared that arrangements were being made to seat 30,000 for the 'exibition. : A tentative date of July 26, agreed on several months ago by the back- ers of the Carpentier-Levinsky meet- ing was abandoned because the New York State Boxing Commission was not appointed in time for the neces- sary arrangements to be completed. | BALL FAN DROPS DEAD WHEN | RUTH HITS HOMER. °° Babe Ruth stepped to the plate in Thursday's game at the Polo Grounds. There was a hush of ex- pectancy, one man leaned forward in his seat-'in the box, tense with excitment. Bat met ball with a crack and the spheroid sailed out toward the far- thest bleachers for a homer. The crowd yelled--all but the man in the box." He slumped forward, dead of heart failure. i Papers in his pocket identified him as Theodore Sturm, Belrose, Long Island. Physicians said his heart 'was weak. A Young East Tndian Runner. Ali-Khan, the youngster wearing the colors of the Athletic Society of Cannes (France), who finished 4th in the Olympic 100 metre race Tues- day, was discovered two years ago by American doughboys convalescing along the Riviera. He is predicted to be one of the world's famous sprinters within the next few years. Ali-Khan, well-known by those who spent time -at Nice and Bannes, Is the son of an Indian prince, being born June 6, 1902, at Ville-Franche- sur-Mer, two miles east of Nice. The veteran Pat Regan, who went out to Oakland from the National { league in the hopes of prolonging his | 1 PAGE NINE Ruttan Furniture E00) FROG / x Al x. AN AAAAN n AAA YX YY) WX) | BO AX) OOOO . : | Fumed Oak Finished; Upholstered in Chintz and Tapestry; all latest styles--TABLES, DESKS AND LAMPS TO MATCH. R. J. The Ambulance Phone 577. Reid Undertaker sad Furniture Deales 230 PRINCESS STREE? JZ HEN you visit every store in the town to get some PHILLIP MORRIS NAVY CUT CIGARETTES and find every one "sold out"..... Well! ain't it disconcerdin'? , That's When A Fellow Needs A Smoke PHILIP MORRIS NAVY © CUT 10 for 15 cents pitching lite, failed to make good and has been given his release by the Oaklan management. - Harry Grebb of Pittsburg and Tony Melchoir of Chicago may furn- ish the semi-final to the Dempsey- Miske title tilt at Benton Harbor, Mich., on Labor Day. A A CIGARETTES a mini) The prédiction is made that the in crease in railroad fares will bring about a shortening of circuits in a number of the smaller leagues next season. The trans-Austrian railway pro- vides free of charge shower baths for through passengers. Sen Sng | ONTHE ROAD,NOT ON PAPER where he has accepted a position. | Hagerman played on the local O.H.! A. intermediates for two years, and | has been one of the shining lights in the 'Woodstock city baseball! league. Before going to Woodstock he was in Belleville and Kingston, | and for two years was a member of | the Kingston intermediates when they fought out the finals for the O.H.A. championships. taint. You send the sooth- ing vapors of the pine woogs, the rich- est balsams and heal- ing essentials, right to the cause of your cold by inhaling Ca- tarrhozone. Little drops of wonderful curative power are { distributed through - the whole breathing apparatus by the air you breathe. Like a iracle, that's how atarrhozone cures bronchitis, catarrh, colds, ' and irritable throat. You. simply breathe . its healing fumes; and every trace of disease flees as be- Yore fire. . So safe, Infants can use it, so sure to re- lieve, doctors pre- scribe it, so beneficial Many a dealer honestly thinks that he sells wonderful cars and says so, glowingly. But after all, that's only what he thinks, and his idea may not be yours. LA .. > A car is valuable to you, not for what a dealer says about it; but be-' cause of what it will do for you on the road. That's wher 'will make you happy or has : Te Your eat We have never been able to do justice to the Reo Six on aper. Words and pictures fall short. But on the road, where the on y thing that counts is the merit of the car itself -- there is where you certain] know, first hand and for yourself, that this amazing Reo Six is a after your own heart. i ~ OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. W. P. PETERS Frank Brower, leading batsman of the International league, which has been sold by the Reading club to the Washington Sesators, has had two trials in the big yard. Four or five "years ago, when fresh from college, Brawler was tried out by the St. Louis Cardinals. Later he was with the Phillies, but was again turned back. He has not shown very bril- liantly in the field, but he's certainly a "bear cat' with the stick. St. Joseph, champion of the West- ern League last season and with good prospects of repeating this year, has been drawing less attendance PRINCE OF WALES FLOR GOOD BREAD FLOUR §750 PER 98'IB. BAG Boyd's Garage 3 'Wholesale Phone 51. Retail Phone 217. in preventing winter ills that no per- son can afford to do without Catarrh- ozone. Used in thousands of cases without failure. Complete outfit $1.00, lasts three months, and is at home than any of the other eight clubs of the circuit. Joe Cosgrove is certainly the class of the Waterbury 'Eastern League team. In addition td managing the Brock and Bagot Sgreets. ' PHONE 20; outfit, his is leading his team in bat- ting ,base running and fielding. a all dealers. We want a new Hotel in Kingston. Everybody should help, & guaranteed to cure; smaller size 50c, DR. NASH DENTIST Princess Street. 'Phone 733 WE TAKE X-RAY FICTURES of troublesome teéth BRINGING UP FATHER

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