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-1 PAGE TWO THE KINSTON N. C FREE PRESS. FRIDAY EVENING. APRIL Victor Tires More Mileage for Lea Money. We have been selling Victor Tires and Tubes for four years and have never been called on to make an adjust ment They have given satisfactory service to thousands of motorists, and the Victor wil give you More Mileage and Better Service and save you money. Come in to see us -we'll be glad to tell you more about the good quality of Victor Tires and Tubes. ; ELLIS CARRIAGE WORKS EXCLUSIVE AGENTS. Telephone 251. Heritage Street. Skill in Thrift The skilled workman, As a rule, is not only. Efficient in his work But also in the way He manages his mon ey. A bank account here Will help pave the way , , To your future success The First National Dank of Kinston D. F. Woolen, Pre. ' W. B. Harvey, Cashier.. TIrSACTOR. Do More in a Dayr Do It Better One man with a FOR DSON TRACTOK can do more work easier and with less expense than two men can do with horses. This means that you with a FOR DSON TRACTOR can actually . raise mort crops, with less work and less eipense. And this means that your profits will be greater with fewer hours of work. BMicUa the KORDSON will uk care of awy pow.r Job on tha farm. It ia Itjtht. alert, fl.iibl. in control and oparation, yt It has power and endurance to epata, Yoo. ahouU ae the FORDSON at wotlt to appreciate its wond.r. ful capabilities, W will f ladty re jroa the proofa II you will ak for tbaoi, eithai by a erBonl call, phone or poet card. SPEAR MOTOR CO. X V. A V 4 BROWNS LOOM WEAK THIS SEASON; FOUL If AS If AS BAD LUCK And Plenty of It Jinx Kept Him From Pennant Last Year One-Pitcher Team and There May Be a Crack in the Pitcher By HENRY L. FARREI.L (United Prese Snort Kditor.) New York, April 13,Lee Foht, bad be the temperament of a crab, could find plenty of reasons for howl ing that he hal been pk-ked out for served for the American League in This time tost year the pet chances of the St. Louis Browns were so bright, and rosy that the fans of the Missouri metropolis were tuning their voice to acclaim the virtues of the man ami the team, who were to bring the first world series, into their front yard. First came the injury which -threw CJierbe off third base and forced Fohl to use the veterans, Bromkie and Fos ter, in a position where speed on foot ana a live arm are needed more than trie stout hearts of those veterans. Then the pitching staff was. diaor gamaea. -fchtielts" rruett, i young iiKBuun university puoner wno jumped into fame by farming Babe ituin iv out or the first li times that he pitched to him, came up with a lame arm and held the bench for most of the eson. Dave Daniorth persisted In tampering with the ball until he had to be released, because the umpires and the managers of the rival ciuos ca-mpea on mm too much ror the use of jlleg'al deliveries. The worst stroke of the bad luck was reserved until the very last. From the very first week of the race, the Brown battled the Yanks toe to toe. They went into the lead the first week of June and remain ed there until the last week of July, wnen iney dropped to second place ior a ween.- janintr tine lead again they Jed the pack until the third week of Aujrust, when the , Yanks again rose va we lop. 1 !: Just before the series in St. Louis in the third week of September, a series that practically decidledi the championship, George ;; Sisler, the greatest power of the team, pulled his shoulder out going after a low throw. H played gamely through the Yank series, but he was not the real Sisler, amf the Browns lost their chance. .Swler then went out or good and Fohl had to shift "Baby Doll" jaoonson m irom centerfield. As a tirst oasenvan, he was a most excel lent outfielder. , '. Miller Hugging, the Yank manager, terms the Browns a. "one pitcher team, , ana nce ura Shocker, at this time,.' is the only reliable pitcher on the staff, the team seems to he ju.ii inn. ' ; , Lack of reserve material ; really cost the Browns their big chance last season, because Fohl had no one to take the place of Elberbe and Sisler. As far as is definitely known now, mo name weaxness exists this year, because nothing but actual playing win miw wnat crass or young ma terial the Brown leatfer has been able to pick up since the close of the season.. , ' .. . : . Since nothing is roally known about wnac foni nas fciund among his rookies, the Browns do not look as strong as they were last year. If ne i not overworked, hooker may win more games than ne did last year, but he is no youngster and! he mignt Teel tn effects of what he went through last year. , REDS ARE STRONGER THIS YEAR, IS WAV FARRELL SEES THEM Not Impossible for Cincin nati to Take National league Pennant and Championship Moran Has Brains Enough The club with which Pat Moran will seek his third pennant is strong- er on pr per than the Ked outfit that finished second last year with a moat exciting dash in the last two weeks of the race. i Moran haa an exceptionally good outfield, a hustling young infield', a reliable catching department and per haps the most promising pitrhing staff in the National League Eddie Roush h'!d out again this year, but Morn found out that it was possible to get along without htm last year and the same should holtf good this year. So if Roush remains away un til August again the team should not be terribly handicapped. At first glance, the- 'attack ' of pneumonia which nut Jake Daubert down for monlihs and made it sure that he will not be able to start the season at first base, seemed like a bad break for the Reds, but there are many baseball men who believe that it tniirht he a ihwn in the ?arb of Ae well-known wolf. Daubert had one of his best se-a- sns last year. lie was a wall on the defense and a power on the offense. Daubert, however, was due to crack several years aero, and. -as in tha case of Casey Stengel, the Giant outfielder, it is not safe to assume tbat he would be in for another great season this year. Moran perhaps will put Fonseca on first . base and many eastern critics believe If he Freca gets real chance at first that .Daubert will have a hard time setting back into the game when he is physically able to play. John McGraw has aaid that Fonseca is a fine second bace- man, but he ia a great first baseman. it can tie seen that trie Jteaa nave the material. Perhaps- the brafhis, that come only after long experience, are not as general among the players as among the Giants, but the Reds have plenty of brains under the gray hatch of rat Moran. and a wise head will cover a multitude of mental slips on the field. . BAD SITUATION Created by Defeat of British Govera- . ment in House. (By the United Press.) IonoVin, April 13. Faced with situation little short of desperate which finds the Labor Party pushing its advantages gained in the Com mons when the government "was de feated Tuesday night, British govern ment' leaders met at 10 Downing Street today to decide what should be done. - The cabinet discussed the oc currences in -the Hwse of Commons Tuesday and Wednesday and what statement should be made this afternoon.-". '. ' . - , , DR. A. L. HYATT DISEASES OF WOMEN AND CHRONIC DISEASES. Office Hoars 2 p. au t 7 f. m. 'Phone 8. Great Reductions on all Merchandise in uar STOCK THE HOUSE OF:FASHION COURTEOUSSERVICE 131ZNORTH.QUEEN STREET , . SUBSCRIBE TO THE FREE PRESS Things We Have Always ICiiown' y IIKNRY L FARREI.L (United Pre,- Sprts Witor.) New York. Anrii i:t it tv i UKinnatt Ki 22 weeks to eet un aj, , vne pennant race. 11 (IOCS JlOt follow that .Pit cfun would have had a part in the worm s serifs, evn if they had bit their reJ form ' before the week of beptomber 23. but it in a .Wh t.Knf a niiserable start kept the l!19 cham- PKins j rom giving the New York uianis more of a tussje. Iremendoun hamli on Ta AMaiva 4mrifva- cd upon the Reds Inst season by the injury which kept Pete 'Donahue, the best young right-hamhv in the Na tional Leamie. (iff Hutu nuinllii nim ure pesKy noufing out of Ecklie Kousin, a powwr on the offense and JefwRie. . . ...It holds good with every club that a goorf start, while not of vital im- nortaiv-e, is a verv valuable fouiyla tn, and for the Reds of 19113 a irooii getaway is of the utmost importance. FOR SORE FEET Peterson's Ointment To the millions of users of Peter son t Ointment PraKnn I "Don't fail to use it for sore, inflani- , acning reel ; it does the work 1 over niKht," Best for piles, old . sores, eciema, itching ami pimply ,' iJ.TA .A" druggisU, 35c. 00c, $1.00, i $a.60, la.OO. (Advertisement.! ' ' IRA M. HARDY, M. D. 10S W. CaaweU St. Phoness Office. 479; Res. 607. I EYE EARKOSE AND THROAT The recent business con dition has brought to the forefront of thought many fundamental consid e r a -7t- tions that have always' been known but have been damned with faint praise. Human nature in the j ; mass is very much like hii ' man nature in the individ ual. One of its dominant characteristics has been ; summed up in the observa 41 tioh, "You never miss the water till the well runs dry." We never appreci ate fundamental things un-. til we have occasion to do without them. This observation has a special application to the Demand of the public for ': the products of industry. While the Demand was at high tide and everybody was busy trying to supply that Demand at a profit no one, seemingly, gave a thought to where the De mand came from, how long it might last, or what would happen if it should fail. We merely assumed the permanent existence of the Demand, just as we as--sume the presence of wat er, air, and fire; But a day came when Demand Began to subside, and in many industries it came almost to a full stop. - And then we missed it, and realized as never before, what an important thing it . was. And we began to in quire where it came from in tne first place, and how it might be restored. We always knew ev erybody knew that De sire for things made a De mand for them in the mar ket. That people desired things we accepted as an elemental fact. ' But when we discovered that Desire fluctuated we began to ap preciate that Desire, as we know it, is a thing created by the art of man. It is a , highly specialized form of an elemental needjust as a Louis XVI chair is made out of a tree. This discovery led to an other equally important discovery that the means of refining and specializing that Desire was Advertis ing. The gigantic work that has been accomplish ed by modern advertising now stands out in bold re lief. It has been the means by which, the refinements of civilization have been made known and made de been made into Demand. It is a simple fact that a mil lion profitable forms of in dustrial activity owe their very existence to the fact that Advertising ) upheld the standards of living which in turn provided the demand for their products. Published by the Kinston Free Press in co-operation with the American Association of Advertising Agencies ,13, 1?1 KINSTON. N. C 4 4 it '8
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
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April 13, 1923, edition 1
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