a 38 BRINGING UP FATHER = Why not buy now, on asy Terms $5.00 cash and $3.00 every two weeks. You will never miss the money and you can beat the cars home. BR Indian Motorcycle o Better than ever. Made by the largest and best plant in the world. EASY TERMS THIS YEAR. One-half amount down; balance divid- ed into ten months. , CALL AND SEE US. TREADGOLD Sporting Goods Co. Telephone 529 88 Princess St., Kingston. ------ -- ts 5c. Poet Cigar 5c. Look for Silk Thread on Tip of Each Cigar. TRY <8) | music to the ears of the baseball in New York. With all the clubs at their training camps preparing for the season' campaign, speculation | has already started about the chances fans {every reason to believe .that the Ed. Pfeffer are still holding out. With the addition of much prom- ising new material, the Giants should be even stronger t year than last, { There will be trouble, however, Trom | the Boston and Brooklyn clubs be- | cause of their strong pitching staffs | Philadelphia will bear watching for [ the same reason, but none of the | western clubs looks . formidable enough to cause the Glanis serious | diffi ulty« AL a fielding and batting { combination, it is- doubtful if the | New York Club has an equal, | * \ S-------- | Will Miss Carrigan, | o Tt seems probable that there will { be a new pennant 'winner in the Am- | erican League this seascn. The Bos- ton Red Sox have now occupied a | high place in the game =o long that | it"1s only natural to expect them to {slip back, The retirement of' Mana | loss to the club, While Jack | may prove a success as a manager, {it will take some time before he can {instil the confidence and spirit into | the men that Carrigan did. The | game has never had a cleverer lead- |er than the retired Boston pilot. He {| had that | best out of his players | Carrigan at all times, would never admit gefeat, | a trait wich he also'imparted to his i players, There are several veterans, | no matter how good they are, cannot | lagt forever Three Contenders, New York and Chicago, Detroit will be clubs to be reckomed with during the coming season. The Yankees in particular have bright prospects. If Maisel fits in at sec- ond base, Donovan's team will be strong in every position, - The pitch- ing staff ranks with the best in the league, The White Sox "seem to have an abundance of promising talen, but at no one time has Man- ager - Rowland had all his players doing their best. They lack con- certed action, It has been an in and out club. Individually . its players are among the best in' the game. Detroit will again be dangerous, just as the Tigers were last year The pitching staff was Detroit's only weakness last season, and Man- ager Jennings has strengthened this department of his team. With good pitching, Detroit's remarkable bat- ting strength would undoubtedly keep the club in the pennant fight. It would seem that there are certain to be many upsets in both leagues this year, and, after all) their is just about what pleases the encrmous bastball public more than anything else, Vv ' « Chinaman With Portland. An almond-eyed son of the Orient will appear behind the plater for S. OBERNDORFFER, Maker, Kingston. w aan) * Blakemore Studio Jommercial Photography. Enlarging and Copying, Home Portraiture Kingston's Largest Photo Studio. All work guaranteed. 180 Wellington Street. Over Royal Bank Chambers phis, Mike Doolan at the helm with | former major league stars have got With Mike Donlin piloting "wiih | forme the Norfolk club, a trio of Rochester, and Arthur Devlin man- 1917. under cover for Portland when the Coast League festivities begin, says a Portland de- spatch. fanager McCredie cabled from Honolulu that he had signed Kenyen, a Chinese catcher, He show- ed up in scintillating style while the Beavers were being beaten by the Chinese team in Honolulu. Working Out in Havana. Pitcher Earl Hamilton, of the St. Louis Browns, is working out in Havana, Cuba, with a number of Cubans, including Marsana, Acosta, Gonzales and other Cuban big leaguers. The work should put him in the best of shape to start the sea- son with the American League pen- nant chasers. of the various clubs, In another short month, the clubs will be back home In the National League, there is] Giants will} | ger "Bill" Carrigan, will be a great | Barry | rare faculty 'of getting the! place in the bitter battling themselves a And sure for first division. | ensued. The teams went along to a tie un- til the last half of the tenth. Then the Sox populated the bases wita two men out. The batter was "flagged" on his way to the plate by Carrigan, who whispered words into his sound receiver and then scooted back to the coaching lines. bunt--a seemingly suicidal play at {the time. The batter, followed orders, the {bunt rolled slowly, tantalizingly {along the base lines. The Yank in | fielders tore in madly-- but too late! |The runner on third had crossed the plate, the batter had reached first in} | safety, the dangerous "squeeze play' [had 'worked--and 'the Sox had won| the game that cinched for them the league { : {1916 pennant of the Americ | SLOW BALL, PITCHERS | in [Ww hat Has Become of This Type of | Slab Artist, What has become of the flow ball] | pitchiers? Nap Rucker, who pitched the slowest ball that ever crept up on a big league batsman, has retired from the service of the Brooklyn, | while dean Dubug, another rather | is also through | some famous slow baller | with the Detroit Tigers after six years of splendid service, To the layman it is often a mys-| tery how these slow . ball pth | i could get "by. Reporters, some of i wham had played ball at college and | | elsewhere, would sit behind Jack Warhop's service and their hands | would itch for a bat so they could | | stick one of Hop's benders into the | Harlem River.. But Warhop, though | never a star, lasted in the big league | seven vears, And Jack never had any luck, or he would have been | rated much higher as a pitcher than was the case, Then there is Al Demaree, with his dinky little slow curve, which has made monkeys out of the Giants for | the last two years, Everybody al-| v ays admitted Demaree had hardly a | thing, but hé gets by . While every- | body was raving about Al the fi year he was\ with the Giants, 1913, McGraw once said: "No, Demaree is not a great pitcher, He has nothing but a little curve and confidence." Al perhaps has less now than he had then, but that little curve and con- | | fidence won five games from the | Giant sluggers last season. And Al always feels so bad after he has taken a fall out of McGraw's bunch! \ No Date Trouble. J N.H.A. officials anticipate little or no trouble over dates for the Stanley Cup games on the Coast. The N.H.A. championship will not be decided before March 10th. President Frank Patek has suggested that the first game on the Coast take place n the nigh of March 17th, This would necessitate the departure of the N. H.A. champions on Sunday, March 11th, and would force them to go ditect to the Coast to play, without a day's break or even an opportunity to rest up after the long journey Ottawa wants the start put off until March 20th, if the Senators win, but it is possible the Coast will have a play-off too, and a natural delay ensue thereby, If Seattle loses its remaining game to Portland, and Vancouver wins its two remaining games with Spokane, Vantouver and Seattle would tie for the champion- ! ship, necessitating a play-off, SPORT Matty McIntyre, the former Detroit and Providence player, has succeeded Tige Schmidt as manager of the Mo- blie team inthe Southern Assoeia- tion. . As a confirmed bleedor, thé mare Virginia M., in the stable of H. G. Bedwell at Havana, will not be al- lowed to start there again. (Strunk, Benny 'Kauft was louder than a Caruso record this time last winter, but this year he hasn't made the noise of a weak lamb bleat. Connie Mack has released Second + ! & ., PAGE TWELVE ow THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1917. SS " T -------- memm----m------ l pr ---- - = = - 7 - | k of a Mil Lise . In the or Oo Get Back of a 0 | . | IS t e ime ; Start the New Year right by smoking : CINTS ARE THE BEST BET CARRIGAN CREDITED |? * MILO Cigars. You will enjoy every one. . . . | wilh the av i | in Kingston. You will want§a new bicycle this sum- . With the Best luside Fins in oo | - BASEBALL BRIEFS { { Made in Kings \ . EI OH TES seball. { ; + - mer. x. | FOR THE SAMOS THE Bill Carrigan, the retiring leader |® | G. ' A. McGOWAN, \ Sv NATIONAL LEAGUE, f the world ch Red Sox, is| 4 paar] y x 7. : credited with directing the boat "in.| - OMY Haw in David Fulte's siike / Manufacturer, Kingston. Club Which Beats: McGraw's Team | side play" of the 1916 baseball year. |Plans was that the players didn't ' : 3 Will Win Pennant--Open Race in| The Sox and' Yankees were bat:| Know anything about them. = 3 . : thi in Bos inaf -g8 p series | -- American--Red Sox Not Likely to ir a 8 a Ta ee Ball players don't care a rap if Repent. : * 130th. * The ¢rimson-hosed warriors | their owners snub them, birt they get a-- i Lo Néws from the south of baseball yeeded three games to cinch the pen- Very angry if they are cut. | S------------ . practice in hot, blistering weather is nant, the Yanks wanted them to en- For Insurance » . ROUGHTON 60 Brock St., Kingston. Phone 610 Baseman Harold Cable, formerly of the New York Americans, to the At- lanta Southern League team. Carl { club which be the h Sawyer, Washington {win the pennant, says The Times.| With {wo out, the bases full and a can infielder, | Just what club will be able to accom- | hit needed for victory, what would 1917, and will quit the niovie game plish this feat is a mystery. Brook-|99 out of 100 batters do? Try to Sawyer was offered a contract that lyn is not expected to be able to re-|club the ball out of the lot. Righto.| called for more money than he is re- peat last year's extraordinary oc ur- | And that's what the Yankees, as wel ceiving in the movies rence Brooklyn, by the way, is the |as the spectators figured would. be 5 ! only one of the Major League clubs | tried. But they all reckoned with- Harry L. Frazee, president of thel which has any of its best players Out the crafty Carrigan, who had or-| poston American League Club, an- outside the ranks, Zach; Wheat and |dered nothing more nor less than a ,,,nceq last week that he was con- sidering an offer made by bus men of Honolulu to have the team do the spring training there in the spring of 1918 " iness Harold Janvrin, who playéd second ase Tor the Red Sox after Barry was hurt, and all through the world} series, has signed; after a long argu ment. Hooper, Lewis, Hoblitzel, Mays and Gregg and the holdout now. Jack Nees, former Detroit Tiger, hastbeen.cut from $3.00 to $2,500 by Comiskey, and says that he will play independent ball rather than sign at the salary mentioned Dave Griffith, who was proclaimed | as the best catcher in the Western | League last year, been sold to the Mobile club of . the Southern' League by Wichita has Joe Benz announces his willingnes anda eagerness to receive military in structions and says that a drill madst- | er will .be welcomed by the Chicago | White Sox players. : Pittsburg have secured Warren | Adams, a young first baseman, whom Jrooklyn asked waivers on Joe Bush, star pitcher, and Amos | the fleet outfielder of the Philadelphia American League bases | | ball téam, both of whom have been | { holdouts, have signed contracts. Charles W. Murphy has sued the! Chicago National League club for the | rent on the old West Side Park. He || wants the court to decide either that | the lease holds or that the property | reverts to him. If the lease is can-| celed, then Murphy will rent the park | to Billy Sunday, who wants to hold | one of his religious neetings there. FIGHT IN TOLEDO, Darcy and Dillon Offered Match at That Place. Following the announcement yes- terday that Governor Whitman, of New York, had forbidden the sche- duled bout between Leg Darcy, of Australia, and Jack Dillon, of Indian- apolis, the Toledo, Ohio, Athletic As- sociation sent a telegram to Dillon's manager, Sam Murbarger, offering $40,000, which if accepted will bring the match to Toledo late this month. Under the Toledo proposal the di- vision of the money would be decided upon by the principals. The bout would be of twelve rounds, Boxing Flourishes in England. Boxing is in a flourishing condition in England, despite the war, and the praises of Bombardier Wells are again being sung as a result of the Bombardier's victory over Company Sergt.-Major Dan Voyles, a British army champion. Having eliminated Voyles, Wells is again without a rival for his honors, and all his time, for the present at least, will be de- voted to his military duties. Maranville Signs Contract, Walter Maranville, crack short- stop of the Boston Nationals, who has been at odds with the club man- agement over his salary for mext scason, has-netified President Haugh- ton that he had accepted the club's terms, It is understood that he will be paid about $7,500, which is said to be more than is received by any --------n neon ane) gE J Collis Browne's A -------- A A Ae A A ee A NP rl THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE. Acts like a Charm in DIARRHOEA .... 0. or spearc s GHOLERA ... % DYSENTERY. Checks and 'arrests those too often fatal diseases-- FEVER, CROUP, AGUE. The best Remedy knowa for COUGHS, CPLDS, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. 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