You Like to Have a ~ Bicycle Without the Nork of runs from 5 to 25 miles an . of gasoline. Only $70.00, porting Goods Co. P oe oe hone529 \Afsssssssansna. Save the Babies FOR THE EMPIRE'S SAKE USE ONLY PASTEURIZED MILK Our Milk is Thoroughly Paste in Sealed Bottles. Phone 8 oe urized and sold Cars That Come Here damaged in any way leave here with all damage removed and in as good condition as they ever were or better. So if your auto is not just right in every way send it here at once, ev It the fault or injury * seems slight. Little troubles have a habit of gett ng serious suddenly, especially in automobiles. "Porritt Garage Co., Ltd. Phone 454 Wellington Street EGO Low Shoes and Pumps Ladies' low laced kid shoes from $2.50 to $3.50. Ladies' pumps, in or kid; something real class $3.00 and $3.50, Ye. patent, gun metal, 'ood chew is a comfort -- make it a greater ; y si Ve i i flavor and along, lingering oa cause of nearly all tooth ® "Made in Canada by Expert Canadian Workmen * » | ; 10c A Plug Everywhere ean. Lh oe chewing King George's Navy ( @® purchased the two- | and Arravan from | e and Lew Marion | has sold McAdams to T. J. Harman. | The latter will race his purchase on | the half-mile tracks. g Trainer "A. E. Gates has severed his connection with the stable of W. A. Campbell. ¢ Jockey McTaggart has severed his connections for the time being with the H. P, Whitney stable. Increas- Ing weight and the hot weather are said to have been the causes. Me- Taggart will endeavor later to re- duce his surplus weight gradually and resume riding this fall. It is reported that' A. K. Macomber has signed Jockey. John Loftus to a contract to ride his horses next year. Jockey H. Woods, only recently reinstated after a long suspension for an un atisfactory ride on .Buck- horn at Belmont Park, has decided They were seated in the He started warming up upon the job; ¢ He looked at her and whispered, "Mame, with me than Tyrus Cobb; "THE MAJOR LEAGUER'S DAUGHTER, You've made more hits Your curves look more" But here he stopped an parlor where the gas was burning low, / 3 you know I love you so style" A The decision was against him, he was out about a mile, * When unto him these "I am the only daughter of a major While you are but an unknown bus cruel words she said: v league phenom, her bloke; My Old Man bats .300 almost every season, Tom, While they tell me that your hitting Some day when you are drafted or 1 may listen to the words you have is a joke; J ybu have a batting eye to say; / But until some ivory scout beats 'the bush and digs you up, There ig nothing doing here for you to-day." The years went by ang Tom improved, his work began to shine; His batting and his fielding were immense; o His slugging Jumped from .083 around 449, While day by day he splintered up some fence: But in the meanwhile Mame's. Old Man began to lose his eye, They canned him when his salary whip went dead; So Tom, he passed her up for good, and now she wonders why Those bitter words unto him once she said. THE BIG PAY ROLL to come to Canada to ride as a free lance, | | George Smith, the three-year-old | Star of the John Sanford establish- | ment and winner of the Kentucky ! Derby, will be shipped from Saratoga to Hurricana Farm at Amsterdam at once and retired from the ' season. This good colt' went slightly amiss in Chicago previgns to the running of the Derby and upon his return east | it was deemed best to rest him. until | next season, | -- ! The Horsemen's Protective Associ- ation will pro-pose an amendment to | the new claiming rule to restrict the | claiming of a horse to an owner who | has a horse in the same race, { The monkey-on-a-stick style of rid-| ing evidently does not appeal to the | West Australian owner-trainer, J. G. | F. Robinson, and he brought the matter up at the annual meeting of | the Western Australian Turf Club, | suggesting that the stipendiary stew- | ards should be given instructions | to compel boys to ride with longer | stirrup leathers. The chairman said the matter was one for the owners, | and suggested that the latter should | refuse to employ boys except under | specified conditions. ¥ LACROSSE HAS NOW COME BACK STRONG. | National Union Season Prov- ing a Big Success--Credit Due President. Lacrosse is getting into its own again, says the Montreal Star. This is due in part no doubt to the care which' President St. Pere, of the | National Lacrosse Union, has taken | in selecting reliable referees and the | persistent manner in which he has | emphasized the necessity for clean play. There has been. as usual, com- plaint abeut officials; but also as usu- | al in almost every case from the los- | ing, and the weak teams. | The President, however, cai hard- | ly be blamed for this particular state of affairs, one which time will prob- ably remedy next year, when the present Cornwall and Ottawa play- ers, mainly 'colts, will have been properly broken in. | Considering the competition Which} thie local clubs have been compelled | to endure in the early part of the! season from the cheap race tracks, | they have not done so badly finan- | cially, while Nationals, with good weather, may expect to reap a fine harvest next Saturday, when, if they lose Sainst Shamrocks on their own ground, the Irishmen will have the championship virtually "ejnched." With the N. L. U. season two- thirds reports of death and rowdyism in baseball, the" National summer game of the United States, and the unseemly scenes which have of late b matches, Canada's | summer pastime, may congratulate | itself upon the record it has made | thus far. ; i wl | | | | | } i } | | OF BOSTON BRAVES. -- it Will Cost Club $150,000 in Salaries This Year. aE The Boston National League' club does not exploit the fact in the pa- pers, but it is true, nevertheless, that the Braves' pay-roll is probably the largest of any club in either major 'eague. Percy D. Houghton, Harvard's football coach, pulls down a big salary as president of the club to represent the wealthy Bostan men who are associated with him in the ownership of the team. Then there is Manager George .T. Stall- irgs, who is, with the possible ex- ception of Manager John J. Me- Graw, of the Giants, the highest priced manager in baseball, This last spring Stallings signed a five- year contract with the present own- ers at $18,000 a year. Johnny Evers, the captain of the team, is said to be pulling .down $10,000, while First Baseman Konetchy, ranking next to Evers in salary among the players, is good for $9,- -000. The entire pay roll for the Season is probably close to $150,000, monthly pay day during the six months of the championship season. -------------- Matas at at ane * * 200-MILE CANOE RACE ,. 4 + FOR SOLDIERS ONLY, + L J ---- very % Efforts are being made to ar- ¢ range for reviving two hundred -* mile canoe race which was aban- + doned by mutual agreement of + the donor and trustees for the # period of the war, It is pro- # posed to hold the race in the Camp Borden district and make # it~open to men in khaki only, % # provided the consent of the mM: % tary authorities can be secured. + # As the race js essentially a test # * of endurance" and resourceful- ness the promoters anticipate #* no objection from the military + * authoritie, * * FERRE EP MIP M IERIE NP 04 CANADIAN WAR TAX HAS NOT AFFECTED The Horse Racing Sport--In- terest in It Has Been Advanced. Judging by the throng which taxed the accommodations at Fort Erie, on Saturday, and the tremendous play in the pari-mutual machines, the second Fort Erie meeting, even op- posed by great Saritega, will con- tinue to reflect the prosperity which has been go flattering earlier in the year here and at Hamilton and Windsor. It is true that the Can- adian tracks have been subjected to vanced in such great bounds it is pre- dicted that with scarcely an '®excep- tion they win accept the added bur- den and record greater financial sue- Sesses than yet known. That this must be the situation is indicated in the expensive and voluntary movés to the betterment of racing comndj- tions which have cropped out vari- ously all over the circuit. If, as promises to be the case at Fort Erie, all this Contributes to increase the sporting features of racing in the public eye, the pubic will be satis- ed. The Niagara Association should however, reform its schedule, The fact that many visitors to the track on Saturday did not get back from, the course until approaching eight o'clock, speaks for itself and justifies |. previous public criticism in this re- spect.--Buffalo Express. Nick Carter, Pitcher.' Nick Carter! Sounds like the hero in one of those yellow-backs of boyhood days. But Nick Carter is a pitcher and recently was secured iby the "Chicago Cubs from the Am- | erican Association. Ni is a | Georgian and is reported by far the | best looking from Indianapolis in many ja season.! (In the bidding contest league recruit sent for Carter, | Chicago outbid several clubs. Cin-, | cinnati offered . $8,000 for Nick. Cleveland once owned Carter, but turned him over to the American As- sociation. tt ------ et -------- > Quick Finish For Jap. Heralded as the Japanese wonder, Jalean Cartuska, of Tokio, entered the ring 'with or $12,500 every semi-| eddy Hayes, colored Prete ae---- | BASEBALL BRIEFS. | er ttt ttt tbat Elmer Miller, the Baltimore out- fielder, whom the New Yorks recall- ed several days ago, has been turned over to Buffalo, of the International League. Ira Thomas, the big catcher of the Athletics, and one of Connie Mack's most dependable coaches, is now on a scouting expedition in the North- west, Substitute outfielder Roy Hartzell has been sent to Baltimore by the New York Club. Hartzell entered the American League with St. Louis in 1906, and has been with the New Yorks since 1911, Nap Lajoie still looks good around the middle cushion, even though he is pastiming between the sensational Witt and. the rapid first-sacker Me- Innis. President Johnson, of the Cubs, has been fined $1,000 for the game forfeited to the Brooklyns recently: Tinker has paid a $100 fine too. Organized baseball is employing 2,600 players less than the number in harness before the Federal League started. If the Giants can win without hit-} ting, what will happén when they again get to banging the old apple on the beezer? Very few ate picking the Reds and the Browns to win a pennant. And still fewer, among rival ball clubs, are taking them for the jokes they used to be a few years ago. There was a day when mere mentjon of the Reds or Browns evoked a merry guf- faw. Most of that laughter has now ceased. 2 "Tris Speaker is~ the best ball player in the world, and he is doing for Cleveland something that all the other stars could not do. That is the most positive proof that any one could offer," said Manager Lee Fohl, of the Cleveland Club, the other day. "No one looks better than Tris for the batting championship." TO HONOR UMPIRE EMSLIE. National League to Mark Canadian"s Long Career, At a four-hour conference at league headquarters in New York the heads of the National League adopt- ed several new rules 'and upheld at every point the umpiring corps against charges of favoritism and inefficiency brought against it. A protest signed by spveral hundred Boston fans chargifig discrimination against the Braves was not even con- sidered. The {following adopted: 1--Hereafter coaching from the players' bench will be restricted. The players will be allowed fo address remarks only to members of their own team. No word shall be spok- en either to or about an umpire, riv- al player or.spectator, 2---The official scorer hereafter must be notified not less than five minutes before a game of the ling- up of the teams. It was decided, as a token of ap- preciation to Robert Emsl'e that on next Saturday, the 25th anniversary of his apppintment™ as an umpire in the National League, a fitting testi- monial shall be given him between the games o fa double-header at Eb- bet's field, Broeklyn, new rules were mn ' 16c.Each, Soldiers Swear By Batterton, the Phot her, 282 On street, "On the Way to Bartiefela. % pen are Night. | - . ee Motor Boat and Automobile Lawn Seats, - Chairs, Cotas, Couches, Etc, White En- amel Goods R. J. Reid Leading Undertaker, Phone 577 : A TOMBSTONE OF BEAUTY always expresses to the passerby the loving care with which it was sel- ected. If you have an idea for such & memorial we will carry it to the last detail in accordance with your desire. We are at your service for monumental work of any kind. JAS. E. MULLEN Cor. Princess & Clergy Sts, Kingston. Phone 1417 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 Hal: by Eddy, and since that time for materials and striking qualities, Kddy's have been the acknowledged best. WHEN BUYING MATCHES SPECIFY EDDYS' SE . Men's White Canvas Shoes and Oxfords, rubber soles and heels, $2.50, $3.00, and $3.50. $1.50, $1.75 Men's White Tennis Shoes, and $2.00. Women's White Temmis Shoes, $1.25, $1.50 and $1.75. Boys' Tennis Shoes, $1,-$1.25 and $1.50. Girls' Tennis Shoes, $1.00. - Children's Tennis Shoes, 75¢, 85c ahd 90c | Sutheriand&Bro, The Home of Good Shoes. |, 11 1 | { Hil | f |