September Records All the Newest Records Are Now On Sale. Remember Columbia Records are worth a trial.' Then you may be our regular customer as we a gaining new customers every day. It does not make | any difference what machine you have. Our Rec-| " ords will play you better music than any other. Give Us A Trial We have Grafonolas from $20.00 to $475.00. | You will be delighted with a Columbia the same as| some of eur best families. Small machines $12.00 and $15.00. ~ Some) in and let us play your favorite music.for - we na hide | Treagud Sporting Goods Co. 2: Phone 529 I Ny masadade ; Save the he Babies FOR THE EMPIRE'S SAKE ' USE ONLY PASTEURIZED MILK " Our Milk is Thoroughly Pasteurized and sold in Sealed Bottles. Price's Phone 845 DINING ROOM FURNITURE Tables All Latest Designs and r PIN i 5d ws fe ee] uf Phone 577 Setts. R. J. REID, Leading Undertaker :: Kingston's ELECTRIC Store Our Tungsten Lamps Are Durable and Effici- ent. Let us.advise you how to light your home at the minimum cost for elec- tricity. Everything Electrical. H W. Newman Electric Co. Phone 441 79 Princess St. re Racing In Cuba Profitable For The { | week brings to mind the fact that in | a short time the racing | | least once a week, and if conditions | ing the meeting, THE a HORSE "RACING 0 TE PREPARATIONS FOR THE LONG WINTER MEETING Horsemen--There Will Be . Over Eighty Days Of The Sport, The arrival of two carloads of { horses at Oriental Park, Havana, last season fn Cuba will again begin. The people of the island are anxiously looking | forward to a resumption of the sport at the beautiful course in Marianao. Racing in Cuba has already become a fixture, and is fast taking a strong hold on the people down here. They have learned that the sport is con- {ducted on a high-class plane, and that no pleasanter afternoon's outing can be spent than a visit to Oriental Park. The management of the Cuba= American Jockey Club has mapped out rather pretentious plans for the coming winter meeting. Every ef- fort will be made to attract some high-class horses, and the owners the better class of theroughbreds will be catered to.Special days every week will be set aside as 'society days," | last year; and also is in { number of runs scored with | compared with 144 for First Time Since o 1000 That Cobb Has Not Led Hitters. Speaker put another point between him and Cobb in the race for the Am- erican league. batting championship last week, and with Cobb's conces- sion of the title, may now be reckon- ed the champion. It will be the first time since 1906 that any player par- ticipating in mere than fifty games has outhit Cobb in the American Lea- gue, The Georgian still leads in stolen bases with 60 against his record- of 96 for the whole season front in 103, the whole 1915 season. . Leading batters who have played in half their teams' games including Wednesday's: Speaker, Cleveland, .391; Cobb, Detroit, .360; Jackson, Chicago, .348; Strunk Philadelphia, .316; Gardaer, Boston, .312; E. Col- lins, Chicago, .309; Veach, Detroit, .301; Sisler, St. Louis, .299; Roth, Cleveland, ,293; Nunamaker, New York, .292, Hal Chase of Cincinnati, is still in front in the National League race, "led the league a on, has dropped team hitting, The leading when extra attractions will be pro- vided in the way of rich handicaps | and band concerts by the wonderful | Municipal Band. And speaking of bands, the Municipal Band is really one of the greatest organizations of | its kind on this continent, as every- | | | batters are: Cha | Wheat, Brooklyn, . McCarty, Brooklyn-New York, .323; Daubert, Brooklyn, .314; Hornsby, St. Louis, .312; Hinchman, Pittsburg, .307; Robertson, New York, .306; Wagner, Pittsburg, .298; Stock, Philadelphia, ». 330; one who has listened to one of their concerts will testify to, During the past few months Secretary Flynn has | received applications for membership | to the club from many prominent] gentlemen on the island, and the] club house this winter promises to be the scenes of many brilliant gath- | erings. ! As to the-racing this winter, there | will be some eighty odd days of the! sport. There will be a sort of pre-| liminary season of three weeks, start- | ing on December 7, when racing will | be held on Thursdays Saturdays and | Sundays, Beginning Christmas Day | the regular season will be started, with racing six days a week. The | smallest purse will be $400, and they will range in value up to $1,000. There will be a $1,000 handicap at wgkrant, twice a week. Racing in Cuba is profitable for the horsemen. Last winter the Bed- well stable won $20,000, and the club hung up in purses about $200,- 000. There were 300 horses on the grounds, and about 250 started dur- COACHES CUBAN COLLEGIANS, Former University of Toronto Star at Havana. Dr. "Dick" Grant, former Univer- sity of Toronto: and Harvard mile runner, who is a St. Mary's, Ont., boy and brother of Alex. Grant, >a famous athlete, has been appointed director of athletics at the Univer- sity of Havana, Cuba. Dr. Grant went to Toronto last spring and en- deavored to-enlist in the 180th (Sportsmen's) Battalion, but was re- jected as being over age. » While at University of Toronto the veteran athlete won the Canadian in- tercollegiate titles at various dis- tances, and also held the United States intercollegiate mile record for several years. His figures were not bettered until recently. The Uni- versity of Havana has taken up row- ing as a major sport since Dr. Grant went to the Cuban city, and he is now endeavoring to secure a coach for the crews. Quarter Sizes .294; Long, St. Louis, .290. BASEBALL IN SW EDEN Swedish Youngsters Took Keen In- terest In American, King Gustave of Sweden attended one of the two exhibition baseball games which the American soccer team played at Stockholm and Ves- teras, respectively, and expressed himself as delighted with the Ameri- "can national pastime, "Wonderful, wonderful" were his exact words to Secretary Cahill. Dis- | cussing baseball, Mr. Cahill said that he had distributed a score of base- balls among the Swedish youngsters, who took to the game like ducks to water. It is possible that he may return to Sweden within a year for the purpose of furthering the imter- est in the game over there. In the two games played the Americans lent some of their own players to their opponents and won by 8 to 7 in a ten-inning game at Stockholm, the one which was witnessed by the King, and by 21 to 15 at Vesteras. An odd feature of the first game was the fact that the play was not strated uptil 6.30 pom. A twelve-page pro- gramme, giving the line-up of the two teams, and a description of the game and illustrated by a diamond, showed the Swedish baseball enthus- lasts to be distinctly up-to-date. . It is expected that all attendance and gate' money records in the world's series will be broken this year. Not for several seasons has the interest been so keen. Bravest Field at Boston and FEbbetts' Field at Brooklyn are two of the largest steel and concrete plants in the major leagues. It will not be necessary to turn away as many fans as heretofore because of lack of accommodation. | Torcossp. | The mare Andrey Austin, half- sister to Southern Maid, has been turned over by T. J. Bird to Captain Presgravé, who will breed her' next spring to Bwano Tumbo, with the idea of getting a King's Plater. Tar - Brush, in the Bird stable, has been | fired and will be turned out for the winter. J. K. L. Ross, of Montreal, one of the prominent Canadian owners, con- templates purchasing a stock farm near Montreal, He is extensively in- terested in the thoroughbreds, and it is his ambition to breed some high- class racers. He already has the foundation for his stud in several well-bred mares. A remarkable exhibition of riding was given by Jockey McTaggart at Havre de Grace. He had the mount on Naushon, and soon after thé start the horse stumbled and went to his knees, McTaggart going ower his head. He managed to hold on in this position for a sixteenth of a mile, finally getling back into the saddle, but was so far out of it when the gecident occurred that he pulled up. DAILY BRITISH wHIG, TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 26, 1916. ss Harold Janvrin, the former Inter- Bational Leggue player, is doing grep work at second base for the on Red Sox, in the absence of Jack Barry. Pie Way, the former Yale pitcher, who was with Rochester for part of the season, has rejoined the Giants and will likely be used for the re- mainder of the season. "Rube" Benton never pitched bet- ter ball than at the present' time. Whenever he starts a Giant success svems sure. The owners of the Giants will make much money this year. They have recovered the big money paid for Rariden,sAnderson, Roush, Kauff, Sallee and Herzog. In order to commemorate the com- pletion of ten years' service of Nat Rucker in a Brooklyn uniform, Co. Ebbetts has set aside October 2nd as "Rucker Day." , The Giants will op- pose the Dodgers on that day Big Paul Smith, who was "with Montreal all season, but was sold to Cincinnati, made a good impression on his first appearance with the Reds. He fielded in splendid fashion OUR MILO CIGARS eclipse all others of equal cost and even some that-are sold for consider- - ably more than our price. Made of the best Jong filler tobacco by skill- ed cigar makers, it is a cigar that couid easily be sold for a nickel mcre . will make it your choigé tomo . The G. A. McGowan Cigar Manufacturing Co. Kingston. - -\ OUR STOCK THAT WE,WERE EXPECT- - ING HAS ARRIVED _------------------ And we are now prepared to show intending purchasers a fine selection of Scotch Granits Monuments to choose from. McCALLUM GRANITE CO. 397 Princess St. and hit the ball hard. Grover Cleveland Alexander earn- ed his second _bonus of $1,000 on Sat- u by winhtng his thirtieth game of t season. Recently the Phila- delphia club pald him $1,000 for winning twenty-five games. Satur- day he pitched and won both games of a double header, but what is more remarkable, he shutout his oppon-|- ents in the second game. Red Sox Favorities. The Boston Red Sox are counted sure winners of the American League pennant and several wagers have been made in the financial district of New ¥ork that they would also win the world's serips, whether opposed to the Brooklyn Robins or the Phillies. L. J. Stokes, a 'curb broker, of- fered one wager of $1,080 to $900 that the Red Sox would retain their title of world's champions, while several smaller wagers at odds of 10 to 8 were made. It Doesn't Pay To buy inferior articles Jor home yse, no matter how small the article may be. fs With matches, as with evorything else, it pays to buy the belt. Eddy's " Silent Parlor" Matches will save your time and temper, for they are good strikers, safe, sure and silent. Always ask for Eddy's, Vv DIRECT FROM THE BREWERY We will deliver to your residence from our stock at Hamilton, Send orders to us at Montreal. $1.70 (2 ted pints. S250 8 case (2 do) repeted apart $1.00 a case additional, with fiest order to cover cost of case and bottles. It will pay you to order two cases, charges are only slightly higher than on one. GEO. SORGIUS, 35 Rivard Street, Montreal promptly as express a :: By GEORGE McMANUS DOCTOR! IM NURSE ? CETTIN WORSE ACAIN -0-0-0! i al Bad |