10 CRAPS TO CRICKET THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. TING RUMMY T0 RUGBY EWS » SATURDAY, NOV. 25, 1023. -- "BADMINTO | | TO BOXING (QUEEN'S OR ARGONAUTS, ~ WHO'LL WIN SATURDAY' Toronto Globe. ~The Dominion series battle may @% down in history as one of the . Bost thrilling of the time. All the '#8ats have been sold, and with fair weather it is expected that eighteen _ thousand fans will jam their wag in- * to thas University of Toronto stadium, - Were two great teams will decide the * championship of the East. Interest has never reached a high- er mark either in Toronto or any- where else in Ontario than that be- ing shown in Batunday's game The victory of the Queen's team against University of Toronto last Saturday at Montreal has Jone footfall a world of good, and people who never saw a gridiron contest in their lives ars! pulling for the "game' Presbyterians 10 go right through to the Canadian title. Travelling men claim that even the small towns are interested In the ~ Tesult. The Ottawa Valley towns, which In the past have sent many players to Queen's can see nothing to ft but the Tricolor. If the field is dry and fast here, or lose, will face the best that has crossed their path in the last two years. The Kingstonians everywhere, and they to us it to the best advant- There is not a player In Canada . today who can get around the ends It remains to be seen if Queen's enn play as well on wet grounds as the Argos can. The locals perform well irrespective of the grounds con- dition. The new system and more teamplay plus the placing of Mun- at middle wing may mean that fhe Tricolor team will be as much at . ome on a slippery fleld as they are under better conditions. . It is, perhaps, worth while remark- that "Pep" Leadley has yet to brilliantly on anything but a dry field. Batstone, too, is not as ef- festive when the rain is coming down but he is steady as a rock, and can _ ¢atch and kick. Conacher is a star on any field. McKelvey stands out on the wing line, and weather condi- tions will not affect his play. _The twelve Queen's regulars who will start the game here against the - , Cigarette Cases We just know he would be delighted to have a beautiful, Engine-turned Cigarette Case. These come in the thin Vest Pocket or the long shapes in both Sterling Silver and Silver Plute. Also in Gold Filled. They range in STERLING SILVER $10 up to $25 SILVER PLATE AND GOLD FILLED $2.00 up to $8.00 Kinnear & d'Esterre Princess Street, Kingston j Argos average in weight 162 pounds | Argos are almost ten pounds heavier [to the man. Queen's ere light but | ' fast. Argos have the weight, but 'are | {mot slow by any means. Two years! |ago when Argos met Varsity in| |the final the Collegians outweighed | {them by fourteen pounds to the man {and the "game" Double Blue team went down by 16 to 3 on a slippery fiekd. -- Toronto Mail Pmpire. , Efforts to get members of the in- tercollegiate championship squad to expross any opinion of Saturday's game were unsuccessful, as one end all maintained a strict silence, but there was a feeling of confidence round the Arema, where they have en quartered for the last ten days The college champions realized that | they accomplished no mean feat when {they eliminated Varsity, and George Awrey stated the truth when he said "We have a grand team now, and are in shape to take on any team In Canada." Queen's are gradually gaming In favoritism end last night there were a few wagers made at 7 to 5 with tha Scullers on the short end, but the majority were at even money. There are plenty of persons who are will- ing to support their confidence In the Tri-color in a financial way and there is more Queen's money around at present than there has been for any other game in which the King- ston team has played this season. The aggregate weight of the Tri- color"s squad of 22 players is 3,587 pounds, or an 'average of 163 pounds, while the Scullers' aggregate or 24 players is 4,079 pounds, just over two-ton on the hoof, with an average weight of 170. The Oarsmen also have an average of six months more in the matter of ages, but that is merely a passing interest and does not get any consideration in a com- parison of the two teams. VARSITY TO LOSE HLEVEN. {Blue and White Have Plenty in Re- serve, Varsity will lose eleven of this year's eenfor Intercolegtate squad next spring by graduation, and among these are Harry Hobbs, the present captain, and Gordon Duncan, vho captained last year's team to the college title, Fred Bartlett, the re- gulaf flying wing; "Red" Murray, the substitute quarter; Bill Prendergast and Ernfe Rolph, regular outside wings; Boston Reflly, Tom Warner, Price Hames, Jimmy Douglas and Norm. Taylor are also graduating next spring. Dick Weaver or Warren Snyder appear most likely candidates for the captaincy of the 1923 twelve, But Varsity will be able to put a strong team on the field. Warren Snyder, Ross Somerville, Ronnie Mc- Pherson and Ketchum will be avaii- able for the backfield; Pequegnat. with the O.R.F.U, squad this season, showed himeelf to be a very clever quarterback, and Dick Weaver, sub- stitute flying wing, will he back to £1 that position. Bill Miles, the best | inside wing in the Intercollegiate this season; Pincher Hyde, George West- man, Jack Campbell, Bob Ferguson and Joe Weber will be out again, -- ---y 'Soldier" Jones, the Canadian pug- lst, has been matched against the Newcastle cruiserweight fighter Char- lie Walford, for a twenty-round bout at catch weights for £100 a side and @ purse. The fight is '0 take place at Newcastle, South >.ields or Well End in January. P. F. (Paddy) O'Connor, manag- er of the Albany club of the East- ern league the past two seasons, has signed a contract to manage the Hart- ford team for 1923. He will succeed Jack Coffey. g 24-HOUR A Few Doors Below After The Evening Motor Drive Stop in at The Savoy Lunch. Quick cour- teous service is our motto. The best food amid pleasant surroundings. Savoy Dairy Lunch SERVICE Grand Opera House "THEM DAYS IS GONE FOREVER" You not only read It, you sing it. Try it on your plano. Watch nightly for this big comic hit. FINISH THIS ON YOUR FIDDLE. MY GENERAL HEALTH AND APPETITE AIN'T WHAT THEY 62 0 9 Fs 1 { IL ALWAYS ATE oe BREAKFAST a) me THEM GONE y i I? ' FY I Bo > K. | (i DAYS IS" FOREVER ! nN) 7 W A i Sports of All Sorts Austin McHenry, star outfielder of the St. Louis Cardinals, was re- ported in a serious condition at a hospital at Cincinnati Tuesday. Doctors have given up hope of sav- ing the life of the ball player, who was operated on recently for tumor of the brain. Virtual control of the boxing sit- uation in Philadelphia is to be plac- ed informally in the hands of a com- mittee of five citizens who have no other interest in pugilism than pure love of the sport. Jimmy O'Connell, outfielder for the San Francisco Club of the Pa- cific Coast League, who is to report to the New York Giants next year, is ill with scarlet fever at his home at: Boyes Springs, California, it was learned Tuesday at San Francisco. O'Connell was sold to the Giants for $76,000. - Pancho Villa, United States fly- weight champion, will not be permit- ted to meet boxers of the bantam weight division, the state boxing commission hqs decked in calling off the proposed contest between Villa and Terry Martin, of Provid- ence. "There are plenty of fly- weights to box Villa," Secretary Muldon declared, "and there's no necessity for him to go out of his class." William C. Prout, of Boston, rep- resenting the New England Associ- ation, was re-elected president of the Amateur Athletic Union Tuesday at New York and Frederick W. Ru- bien, of New York, was re-elected sectretary-treasurer. The Board of Governors voted that the A.A.U. should take direct control of wom- en's athletics and athletic clubs throughout country, making them gubjeot AAU. regulations. A sub-committee to draw plans for women's participation was author- ized to be appointed later, AMERICAN GOLFERS CONSISTENT PUTTERS British Players Praise Their Work on the Green and Also Their Ambition. A golf writer in New York says: In going around to golf tournaments One often hears the remark, "He put- ted himself to victory." It has long been admitted that the man who can putt on the links can beat anybody, for what does it profit a golfer to lay his mashie shot almost dead to the nin if he misses in attempting to hole cut? When the British golfers . who came to this country to compete in the international matches and the national amateur championship re- turned to Great Britain they were unanimous in their praise of "he "Americans on the green." The Britons figure that the Am- erican citizen does not possess great- er natufal golfing gifts than "he Brit- ish amateur, but he has the necessary ambition and, moreover, patience to attempt % apply them to their full, and that is why the American is a more consistent putter than his Eng- lish cousin, Gibson Signed Up. At Winnipeg, Man.; it was an- nounced that Sammy Gibson, star forward of last year's Brandon team, has signed up with the Calgary Tiger for the coming season. ------ Walter Hoover, world's champion sculler, pleaded not gullty when ar- raigned at Madison, Wis., Tuesday on a charge of fourth degree man- slaughter. The charge resulted from the death of Herbert Seely of Ore- gon, Wisconsin, in an sutomobile aocident in which Hoover figured. The athlete, whose home is in Dul- uth, was released on $1,000 bail. Monty Hinckie, aged nineteen. high echool student of Powhattan, Kansas, died at St. Joseph, Mo., Tuesday, from a broken back and paralysis of the legs, which he re- ceived from Injuries received in a football game. TO RACE IN OUBA. Seagram Stable Fians Wither Cam- paign at Oriental Park. The colors of Edward F'. Seagram, wealthy Canadian sportsman, will be seen for the first time at Oriental Park this season, when a number of his horses that recently arrived from Kentucky will be raced by Lee Madi son. Included in the list are Wake- field and the English-bred Ciceron- lan. Mr. Seagram is planning to visit Havana some time during the meet- ing, and will bring a party of friends along. Ford Hunt, who has ridden at Oriental Park fhe past two seasons with considerable success, has ar- rived for the meeting. GRAFONOLA FREE FOR ONE MONTH Buy $10.00 worth of Records and you can have a $95.00 Grafonola Free for 30 days trial. 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