"Somewhere in France" "I Love You, Canada" Two dandy songs on one record for 85c, and will play on any machine. Hundreds of others to choose from. Is your name on our mailing list? Treadgold Sporting Goods Co. 88 PRINCESS. PHONE 529. BT in LL SAARLLL LL ' sssnss Have you seen the New UNIVERSAL MICHELIN Non-8kid Tire, if not, call in at the Porritt Garage Co. - Limited And see it, it will interest you both in price and quality. 210-214 WELLINGTON STREET. PHONE 454. Motor Boat and Automobile. Supplies Halliday's El Phone 94 ts ectric Shop, or { 4 5 * ° The Allies Will Shine te ---------------- ALL THIS WEEK AND CONTINUE TO SHINE AT 320 PRINCESS STREET. FIRST OLASS TOBACCO STORE. Call and give us a trial. ALAS AAA THE LIGHTS OF 65 YEARS AGO are still doing duty in the shape of EDDY'S MATCHES Sixty-five years ago the first Canadian made Matches were made at Huli by Eddy, and since that time for materials and striking qualities, Kddy's have been the acknowledged best. WHEN BUYING MATCHES SPECIFY 0 White vasShoes Infants' White Canvas Strap, sizes 5 to 7 1.2, 76¢ Childs' White anvas Strap, sizes 8, 9, 10 . . 85¢ Misses' White Canvas Strap, sizes 11 to 2, $1.00 H. JENNINGS, King Street ITT, In the World of Sport| HAVE LOST THEIR LIVES IN THE BIG WAR BASEBALL LEADS : The Giants are second in batting, ! fifth. in fielding, second in run mak- {ing and first in base stealing. Buffalo have sold Pitcher Fred | Beebe, the leading twirler of the In-| ternational League last year, to] Cleveland The Ancient English Game is Be. hind Baseball and Lacrosse in Canada--The Latter, "Some Say, May See a Never Setting Sun. On its editorial page the New {York Tribune comments as - fol- lows: Whether trade ever follows a flag or not, cricket trails the British en- sign from Kingston to Rangoon. Americans can be as scornful of the {great English game as they choose. Things have been breaking poor- For better or worse, it has ciroum- ly for the Inter Sfate League, in navigated the globe, and left base- | which 'Frank Shaughnessy and sev-|ball a poor second among the cosmo- eral former Ottawa stars are figur-|politan games. The sun never sets ing. Bad weather has hit all the|on cricket, we can be sure, clubs hard and one or two may be| Our friends the Canadians afe the forced. to suspend operations. principal exception to. the.. British, . -- rule. They have shown themsclves The signed contract of Clyde Rus-|as joyal to the Empire in a erisis sell, the young Cornell pitcher, was as the heartiest imperi uld received Saturday by the Toronto desire; yet they have a Ii for developed among the nations engag-| payl Club. One of the stipulations |their own independence in such les ed in the mortal conflict to success- in the contract, which was inserted |ser matters as sports: Their native fully cope with the squad of perform- by Russell's father, is that the young [game of lacrosse has always had the ers that the United States would be| pitcher will not be obliged to Play |call over cricket. And today base sure to enter, |. Sunday ball, ball has made such headway that No branch of athletic endeavor has! -- cricket stands a distinetly minor escaped losing a more of Johnny Lush a sport, almost as infrequent as in the the most prominent performers. | who first attracted States The tea-party leisure of it Tennis, polo, shooting, football, auto| pitcher at Girrard College, and la- go in no better with Dominion tas- racing, and in fact, every branch ter with the' Phillies, and Toronto, ies ang tempo than with our own known to the present day athletic) has retired from baseball. Lush| Hence the odd result that baseball | followers have contributed in no|played twelve years of major and | at last being acclaimed on thel small measure to the death roll. Class AA league baseball, and British Isles, not by' American ex: a ---- said to have amassed quite a fortune ple, but by Canadians whom the war COBB AND JACKSON his money wisely has brought to London. Our exhibi CREEP UP ON SPEAKER. tion teams have visited England in Tris Has Fifteen-Point Margin {the past with small results. Now {a league has been formed of teas on Jackson in Ameri= can. Havoe Caused at "Several Fronts Among Star Performers in All Sports Has Been Startling. { Many prophecies have been made | as to the length of the present Euro- | oe pean war, says the Oakland Tri-i py. jnqefinite suspension imposed bune, Many present day war ©X" lon Manager Birmingham, of Toronto perts have estimated deaths and €as- |; 1s been raised. The manager has ualties that will result' before the, oon undergoing treatment for a dawn of peace, but one phase of this | painfully 'injured leg and is now grim struggle that has escaped RO-| adv to get back into the game. tice, due no doubt to the stupendous - number of dally deaths and casual- ties, is the effect the bloody conflict will have on the future generation of athletes, The olympic games for 1916 were scheduled to take. place in Berlin, but it is a question whether any such set of contests will ever again | see the light of day It certainly] will be at least & generation before| enough high calibre athletes can be ng Philadelphian, attention as a score or is by investing C, P. Parker, the sensational col- lege outfielder from Dubuque, who signed with the White Sox immedi- ately after the Sox played an exhibi- | tion game there recently, has been dropped by Manager Rowland. It was discovered that he is on the re- serve list of the Lowell (Mass.) Club, of the Eastern League. [win | ceive composed of Canadian hospital wor- kers and other war units, and intér- est in the game has spread rapidly With the decline of other sports since the outbreak of the war there a good chance that baseball survie long enough to to re- a fair trial. Skepticism sug Cobb and Jackson gained last week on Speaker in the race for the batting leadership of the American S-- -- League Averages published yester HANNES KOLEHMAINEN that Joos Heim k day show that, including Wednes- 1at some deep-seatec ritish day's games Speaker ahead of JUST A TIN SOLDIER. charmsreristi must me modified be- all regulars with an average of .389 -- {fore it can prevail over Britisn tradi- to Jackson's .354 and Cobb's Belong To a New York Regi | tion But it now its chance, at Cobb : iy ahead in stolen ba ment, But He Refuses to Ae with 18 detroit leads in team hit- | Er Fight. | great. conquest thus far achieved by Hannes Kolehmainen, the made 'ting with ,260. The American Lea 300 hitters, counting only Erosh irasebalt Phere a temperamental hose w ave play in half or| T& ¢ affinity the game n of ho a a J are: Finnish runner, has refused point|trance easy. Although compara Spaaker AClave fy 169: Jack- Plank to help the 14th Regiment of tifvely new. s gone fast and far ar baa a Tega jo bi Detroit New York, of which he is a member, {Japan has AO professio st SON, WXCAE0, vi) OI tuna. | (© fight the Mexicans. The Finn's|ieang but they are always an after defence is that he did not attach him- { thought, arriving only when bleac! self to the regiment for military pur- 343; Burns, Detroit, .317; Nuna-| maker, New York, .317; Hellman, | be Bliae : ers can be filled with graduates fron poses, but purely as an athlete. He ino back-lot diamonds. Baseball i | | Detroit, 308; Smith, Cleveland, 305; Sisler, St. Louis, .301; Gard-| gays that is a better runner than sol ) ner, Boston. .300. inna het ord Re 10 fe Wajor sport in the Japanese col-|{ Daubert of 'Brooklyn continues to main in "little old New York," no, °8¢S and is widely played in the lead the batters of the National| matter what happens. This action lower grades of schools. American | League with .349. Carey, Pittsburg; on the part of the Olympic champion coaches have been imported to teach! is ahead in stolen bases with 19.) a striking commentary on the the fine points, and altogether the Chicggo retains the club batting lea-| manner in which amateur affairs ave | Westward flight of baseball is most dership with .258. The National's conducted across the border. Koleh- | Promising. Perhaps some day it too, 300 hitters are: Daubert, Brooklyn; mainen did not leave his native | like <ricket, will never see a setting 349; Robertson, New York, ; | shores until he jumped into prom-|Sun. Zimmerman, Chicago, .319; Hinch-| inence at Stockholm. His athletic man, Pittsburg, .313; Burns, Phila-| prowess attracted the attention of | delphia, .810; Wheat Brooklyn, the New York club, and he was in- .3056; Chase, Cincinnati, .304;: Horn-! duced to come to the United States. Louis, .301. Though he has been running around New York' for several years, it de- velops that he is not even a natural- SEES NOTHING NEW ized htisen Shere Hen Buber of other athletes of foreign extrac- IN MODERN BASEBALL. in Gothland in the same boat. tion seems Sts is has is of course, the other gue's ¢ for e it ha as yet HUGHES BEA' RECORD, | Boston Twirler | { "itched 15 Innings Without Allowing Hit Tom Hughes, of the Boston Braves, reke the worlds record for | pitching hitless innings in Satur day afternoon's game 1 the Phil- |lies. He pitched 15 2-8 innings without permitting a hit. The previ- jous record was made by Harry Hedgepeth, of the Petersburg Club, Virginia League, who went 14 inn- | | shy, St. Except in Spit-Ball Pitching-- What An Old=Timer Says: BARRY ANXIOUS TO WIN Preparing: For Ten-round Contest 4 Against "Battling" Levinsky {ings in 1914. Listen td what Adrian C. Anson, "Battling" Levinsky, the New who managed a famous Chicago| York heavyweight, who is fo meet team nearly thirty years ago, thinks Jim Barry, the western pugilist in a| You lads who ordered lilies 0 sel ten round bout at Syracuse, NY To strew on Matty's mound, 0 | nothing except spit-ball next Friday night, has been match-{ May just as well go trade them pitching. Of course there are more! ed with the winner of. the Dillon- For drmms that you can pound; good ball players than we had in the Moran battle, which will take place Big Six sti]l in business old days, but in quality they are no|in New York next Thursday night. With his old arm and head, better than many stars I can re-| Dan Morgan, manager of 'Levinsky,| And ere he quits the harness member, Take the pitchers, for in-| declares that this great athlete is "Tis we who will be dead. stance! You hear a lot about the! now in superb condition and ¢onfi- | There's kinks in his old soup-bone, greatness of - Walter Jolynson, but | dent that he will defeat Barry. | But none in his wise tank Amos Rusie, in my opinion, was at Barry is quietly preparing for the|And with his nifty noodle least his equal. How many pitchers battle in Syracuse. When inform- He still can run-the bank; of today would outclass Tim Keefe ©d that Levinsky had been matched |In nineteen hundred thirty John Clarkson, Charley Radbourne, With the winner of the Dillon-Moran I reckon we'll still read: Charlie Ferguson and Bill Hutchin- battle, the big westerner significant-| "Old Christy still can fool them son? ly remarked. "Levinsky is not Though he's slowed up in speed "The spit ball is considered new through with me yet, and perhaps | in pitching, but I remember when | When he is the promoters will, be Bobby Mathgws used that delivery] looking in another direction. I They have their starting. troubles and that was any, many years ago.| nardly think Levinsky has forgotten | with the trotters in New Zealand It seems but yesterday that Mike What happened to him the last time mpe giper day the Committee of the Kelly, Buck Ewing, Ed Williamson, We met in the ring." {New Zealand Metropolitan Trotting Fred Pfeffer, George Gore, Johnny "I hope to win so decisively OVer'| Club decided that the starter should Ward and Roger Connor were play-| eVinsky that I can get a chance at pave two paid assistants to help him ing ball." TRIS6 Teall "Big Dan | Sromer Moran or Ditfon," continued fin the, work of marshaling the fields Brouthers, one of the heaviest bats-| Barry. "I met Levinsky once and 3 iat the start. Any attempt to beat men that ever lived. | majority of the newspapers gave me | the starting signal will be met with the verdict. He is a clever fellow,|, fine of £10, while a second offence {but I know my battering-ram attack | wip entail . disqualification. | will carry me through to victory." | ------ -- Horsemen Satisfied with Purses William Walker, the chairman of the Canadian branch of the Ken- tucky Horsemen's Association, says Save Yeur Condolences of present-day baseball w i see Racing Troubles in New Zealand 2,000 Hits for Ty. Ty Cobb-this week is celebrating an epochal evéni in his career--or if he isn't he ought to be. 'When = the Peach bunted toward third Son 1 Thrift the Rule day, raced to first and beat the ball| i: 80 far that there wasn't a chance { With Ball Players there is no truth in the story eman- to get him, he completed a total of | 2 |ating from Montreal that it was the 2,000, base hits for his baseball car-| &**®*=*s-*-e4-t-tttttutrems-ssr-ed | intention of that body to demand lar- eer, more than any other player ever| A few years ago, it was a toss-up |8€r purses from "the tracks which made in a trifle more than 11 sea- whether pugilists or ball-players|OPerate under the Canadian' Racing sons of baseball. The next time. were the more liberal with their [ Associations. "The horsemen are the celebrated Georgian came to money. The average ball player was Satisfied with the purses by these bat, he rammed a blow through the a happy-go-lucky chap who chuck-| tracks" said Mr. Walker. infield out int® centre and started on ed -his shekels right and left, saved | his way to the 3,000 base hit goal, nothing for a rainy day, and, in the Oldring to Retire which ranks a player as one of the winter, trusted to his personal pop-| Rube Oldring. veteran outfielder of grand old men of the national game. | ularity to get him a job by which he | the Philadelphia (American League) {could get along until spring. The [baseball team, will retire from base- Roberston Replaces Orton {average pugilist, with a season {ball on July 1st, according to a mes- Lawson Robertson, coach of the fWelve months long, was just as|sage received from Connie Mack, Irish-American A.C., will take charge improvident, flinging' his money to] manager of the Athletics. of track athletics at the University | 811 comers and saving never a nickel! The reason for his announced re- of Pennsylvania next fall. Rohert-|for the future. With no reflection | tirement was not given. Oldring is son replaces George Orton, the form- On races or nationalities, it must bel32 years old and has been a mem- er mile champion, and is signed up remembered ithat the majority of ber of the Athletics for ten years. for the entire collegiate year, [these gay, careless spendthrifts, both [He is a native of New York City. me e-- {fighters and ball players, were of | Dillon Offered 000 {Irish blood; as the merry Irishmen | Orton Loses Job Jack Dillon, who will meet Frank Passed out a generation of Jews came | 'George Orton, the former mile Moran in a ten-round heavyweight upon both ring and diamond, and the | champion, whose home is in To- contest at Brooklyn on June 29th, Jewish athletes introduced the idea ronto, has lost his position as coach has received an offer of $60,000 to of\saving money. Today, all nation- of the Pennsylvania track team. He go to Australia to meet Les Darcy in {alities among the ball players hold 'will be succeeded next fall by Law- a forty-five round contest, providing tightly to their money, and there are | son Robertson of the Irish-Ameri- he beats Moran, Sl |tew pugilists who blow in their coin. [can Athletic Club, of New York. te ented | rr Kingston's Electric Store Cool Smmer breezes from our electrie fans, Highest grade at reasonable prices, Also electric irons from $3.00 and up. Po. H. W. Newman Electric Co. | 79 Princess street Phone 441 Soldiers Swear * By Batterton, the Photographer, 282 Ontario street. "On the Way to Barriefield,"" Open Day and Night. -- A nn MONUMENTS ! By placing your orders direc with us you see exactly what you are buying and as we employ no agents you save the middleman's profit. Buy now and-have your work set up early in the spring. J. E MULLEN Cor. Princess and Clergy Sts. Phone 1417. Kingston, Ont. Motor and Auto Service | KINGSTON MOTOR TRANSPORT & LIVERY CO. Phone 177. Livery, Feed and Sale Stable. Transfer attended 34-38 Princess Street. General Motor Cartage and Auto Service. First-class Horses and Carriages. Freight and Haggage te prompily. Premier Gasoline and Polerine for anle, J. C. MORRIS Manager. A tt et A NP NNN i Just Received FINE LINE OF GO-CARTS CARRIAGES, SULKIES Dall Carriages $1.50 to $7.50 R.J. Reid, Leading Undertaker Footwear The popular summer shoes for women are WHITE CANVAS PUMPS OR OXFORDS. We have a full range of this cool comfort- able Footwear in all the newest styles, from $150 To $450 H.Sutherland & 5 Bro. The Home of Good Shoes