September Records mm nn TWO MORE HAVE GIVEN THEIR All the Newest Records Are Now On Sale. LIVES TO THE_CAUSE. Remember Columbia Records are worth a trial. | «= ----= Then you may be our regular customer as we Bre] apts Titres on Track, Wiens or gaining new customers every day. It does not make | 1c in Recent Years. Two very prominent Intercolleg- any difference what machine you have. Our Rec-[. IT Jory Irominent utero ee ords will play you better music than any other. tion during the past week. « Lieut. W. Stewart McKeough, of Chatham, was an undergraduate in o ® medicine, of the University of To- : \ ronto. He was the champion high . jumper (1912-14)° of the Canadian - Intercollegiate Union, and former captain of the Varsity hockey team. He was company commander in the His mother was a 18th Battalion. We have Grafonolas from $20.00 to $475.00. | ice jarvis, of Toronto. He vis a You will be delighted with a Columbia the same as member of the Delta Kappa Epeil™ some of our best families. \ man in University circles, Small machines $1 2.00 and $ 1 5.00. : ate of Upper 'Canada College and ihe - - - > p. a, » < n Come in and let us play your favorite music for| fy Mian Cote, ater of you both colleges and was star outside : Fire wing of the splendid 1913 R. M. C, senior football team. He was adju- tant of the 42nd Battalion, Montreal. A . His father is a high official of the \ N 0 Canadian Pacific Railway, and now ® | reside in Chicago. They were form erly of Windsor, Ont. In Englan e rincess HH HH hon joined the artillery and received a 88 P ' x P e 529 splendid appointment and has been mentioned for bravery. He has been officially reported wounded. In the casualty lists appears the name of Lieut. A. S. Horner, the yell-known Varsity and Argonaut FE nghy player. Horner was wounded a on Septémber 16th, and died last) Wednesday. While at Victoria Col-| M'GEE MEASURED TP To The Standard ard Of His = Sporting Eife In Battle, ; Tom Flanigan in the Toronto Tele- gram says: The death of Lieut. Frank McGee, fighting al the front in the last great push, recalls the stirring times of hockey in Canada. The dead player was one of the most spectacular, most brilliant--one of the very great- est hockey players this country, the home of hockey, ever saw, Not a big man, he was never sur- passed in Canada for gamenegs. He flourished as a hockey player in a time of strenpous times. A'man who played the great winter game at that time, took his life in his hands, but nobody ever heard of Frank McGee flinching. As game as 2 pebblen hockey, it is certain that in giving up his life for the glory of Canada hé never quailed. No man ever got McGee in his play without a receipt for it, and there is consolation in being sure that in this last stand he measured up to the standard of his sporting life. Here's to a hero--Frank Mc- Gee. He Is gone, as many a keen sports- man, and not one but has fought a fight to glorify not only himself, but also the sport he followed. It it & lesson that must not be unlearned after this war----that sport, clean and upright, is the best training on earth for the life of a civilian or death as a soldier, STEVE VAIR REJOINS Was Wounded and Invalided, But Joins 150th Battalion, Steve Vair, the pride of Barrie, who went over with the first <con- | tingent and stopped a chunk of hot Hun- lead, has tackled the game again, He was invalided home, but is again in khaki. Last week he | joined the 159th Battalion, a Nor- thern Ontario unit, and is now sol- diering along with Lieuts, Howard and George Macnamarra, Goldie, Prodgers, Gordon Keats and the rest | of that coterie of pro hockey players who are with the northern battalion. Vair was hit in the shoulder, and the billet in its course only missed Jorld of Sport | mason puers. | Frank Gilhooley has joined the New York 'Yankees, and may get into several games before the sea- son closes, in order to give his leg a test. > ie lyn Dodgers. Nixon was purchased from the Dallas Club in 1914, but was a little green for fast company at that time, and Manager Robinson farmed him out to the Dallas Club, of the Texas League, for more ex- perience. Speaking of headgear, Clarenrve Mitchell got 8 jolt in a Broadway hat store. Mitchell w#hit in to pur- chase a lid and casually, mentioned that he was a member of: the Cin- cinnati Club. The clerk immediately brought out a lot of 64 hats for inspection. The Pittsburg Pirates have ob- tained Pitcher Harold Carlson from the Rockford, Ill, Club by draft. The Chicago Cubs had first choice upon the Rockford Club but -.can- celled their claim. OURMILOCIGARS eclipse all others of eqgal cost and even some that are sold for consider- ably more than our price. Made of the best long filler tobacco by skill- ed cigar makers, it is a cigar that could easily be sold for a nickel more and still be considered good smoke value. A trial today will make it your choice tomorrow. The G. A. McGowan Cigar Manufacturing Co. Kings Jack Coombs, the veteran pitcher, ° > y 4 is a great admired of Al. Nixon, they BE t } i ECTRIC St little outfielder now with the Brook- Kings on S ? ore 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 a 79 Princess St. Players of the Cleveland team allege that one of the secrets of Detroit's great hitting is that the batter's box has been elevated; al- lowing the batters to step down on a pitched ball and keep it on the ground or from being hit on the fly. | The question might be asked: Why | don't other teams playing in Detroit, get their hits? Al Birdwell, former New York] Giant; has been signed to manage the | Milwaukee team of the American | leased Pitcher James Scott to Macon Club, from which team the | was obtained recently. | Save the Babies + FOR THE EMPIRE'S SAKE USE ONLY PASTEURIZED MILK Our Milk is Thoroughly Pasteurized and sold in Sealed Bottles. Association next season. The Pittsburg Pirates have re-| {Phe hone 845 13 Price's hdd db lege Hornér was the champion ath- last year was one of the wing line of the Argos Big and strong hg Taken to Hospital. Cadet Baker, Ottawa, who is at-| r Tris Speaker kept the Cleveland | Halliday' S Electric Shop Ps was take io the zGeneral Hospital ve h Tse ONY missel club. in the race for two-thirds of the | A by 3 a : | Vair's heart by an inch. e looke son, buts | in ribute Phone 94 2 1 un M45 King Street He way threatened With ah attack of | your's Heart by an inch. He looked season. 'but the loss of ~Spemker EE EEE N | appendicitis, but an operation Was| «joesn"t he look natural" talk, but jt. not found necessarfe. he fooled them all and pulled thro- a |every confidence that the work will ugh, and now his ambition is to go | be carefully and artistically executed. got. On the ice he always handed from the plainest to the more elabor- out & "receipt" for every chop, so [Likely To Be Made In Baseball Play- | ate. Estimates and sketches furnish- . s, » i 4 lete and president of the Athletic | or 0d an ll om | e Association. He played with the | Varsity champion team of 1914, and | " Supplies was an excellent inside wing player. ] ( r------ tending the Royal Military College, could not keep the Red Sox out of | to the dead may be ordered here with back and get even for the slam he SOME RADICAL CHANGES We erect monuments in. all styles his decision to go back and square ing Rules, |ed on request. % accounts is no surprise. PROSPECTS BRIGHT J. H. Dawson Is Enthusiastic Over The Rugby Prospects. In an interview, J. H. Dawson of Queen's University was very enthus- fastic over the prospects for the rugby season here; There will be a league with the camp team, Royal Military College team and one from Queen's University. The first game will be between Queen's and R.M.C. on Saturday next and on Thanksgiv- ing Day Queen's wjll play the Ham- ilton Tiger khaki team of Camp Bor- den, The game is being staged in the "Varsity Stadium in Toronto and should draw a large crowd. BASEBALL STANDING, MONDAY When the National League mag- nates hold their annual meeting in| New York in December the chances | are an attempt will be made to make | Abolition of the spitball, prevention | of the use of any foreign substance on the ball by pitchers and changing the foul-strike rule so that either the first or second foul will not be a strike. Some of the magnates, too, are in favor of giving Ph#fadelphia a ground rule making a fair hit ball which bounces over the short and low fence at the RBhiladelphia ball grounds a two-bagger instead of a home run as at present. It is pos- sible that other parks will be co sidered for a similar change. JAS. E. MULLEN Cor. Princess £ Clergy radical changes in the playing rules. | Some already being considered are: Kingston. Phone 1417 Lr Most Remarkable Musi- cal Instrument in the - THE : FINEST. BREW--DIRECT - TO. YOU. American League. Clubs. Won. Lost. Pct. STRAND i World. Boston ,.. ..e.i 59 i : 2 Send your Orders for Regal to Montreal. Chicago I."TII1 80 8 EH SE $21.00 to $300.00. Pomp: delivery will be made from Hamilton. New Tore'. 310 Cleveland ... ... 7 500 Philadelphia . .. .225 ; NO DELAY. : : -- $1.70 a case (2 doz.) reputed pints: ET Boston ... 13 88 ©. $2.50 a case (2 doz.) reputed os Bare . "pi, and express charges from Hamilton. 1 se 82 303 f = Oh ! $1.00 a case additional, with first order to cover cost of case and boitles. Cinsiamayy ... ., 60 ; , Heavy Frosts in Country. Come on over to Cooke's It will pay you to kr two cases, as express day ight "Shocka'of late sor and and have u Good Phto ch al ge are } li 1 hi ] th on potato tops were struc own, an "en. udio the loss will be heavy., The frost 153. Wellington street, GEO. SORGIUS, 35 Rivard Street, Montreal COLLAR National Some style with 334 Buck Brock 2 30¢ was so severe that ice formed on] water in the troughs. The flowers near Brock, 'right nexs at Cataraqui Cemetery were stricken b and those visiting the city of the a s Fruit ore. : dead on Sunday said it was a path- etic sight yo see the dead blooms. SNe THAT LIST TWICE -. . Yo ABOLISH y THEM