THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG NS B1y 16 Ex A YACHTING REGATTA Races Will Be Held in tie Open Water of Lake Ontario. Toronto Mail and Empire = The selection of Sodus Bay as the yendezous for the annual meet:ng Racing Associa- : "Of the Lake Yacht 'tion next summer should meet with dhe approve! of Toronto yachtsmen. is some years now since the lh shore has been tho scene of racing, with the exception of | George Oup contest, held ont Bay last July, and Sodus is an ideal place to drop a "in after a hard day's racing. 4 "summer colony" beauty spot lots of Rochester, Buffalo and people have their summer there, While the anchorage is all tnat De desired, there is also good accommodation and a commo. club, but the chief advantage, the yachting standpoint, is all races must be held out in he lake, where open water and fair 'freezes make for better racing and Ite at | SPORTING After taking two Dominion championships it 4s but natural that lour own loca] racing may next sum. . e- . worth. Last season was one of un- | precedented entertainment, and, |there was so much on the pregram- |everything and racing, both on the Best wishes to R.M.C. in their contest with Sarnia for the Dominion {lake and bay, and cruising away | Intermediate Championship to-morrow. The cadets are one of the finesy i, 3: . {for week.ends, were seriously in- | téams who ever donned uniforms and if the boys from Western Ontario jtferfered with, Next summer there | defeat them we'll call them the very best. {and incoming Sailing Committees {on our leading clubs will see to it Queen'sb University should have requests for exhibitions "with American [that fixtures are made attractive-- | teams. But Queen's are not having any--not under that *' play-our-rules- {that each and every class has ts | oo e : & a) ors, fan an arm ne | FROM THE OUTSIDE--LOOKING IN | . { me that time could not ¥e found for| will be a change, in this respect, | share, and its chance, and that no | #0d-be-made-a-fool-of " agreement, at any rate: effort will be spared to make rac. | ~~ ing programmes "fit,"" and save | We admit that the hockey outlook for Kingston this gcason is not) |overlapping dates. | as bright as it might be. But those who attribute it to lack of playersy | There may be some who will | are away out in their reckoning. There are dozens of fine JOURE pore [onder why we are talking sailing | formers around the Limestone City. They might not be winners the jand racing for next sumemr, when | first year, but they'd be mighty good contenders with the proper handling. iwe have a'long winter ahead of us, - {but I am sure Commodore Jarvis | will forgive us for quoting ome of | One fan suggests that President James Kane and his merry men {his lnany wise remarks, when start up a hockey league, but, from all we can hear, baseball is said that "races are won in Janu- | about all they care to. handle right now, thanks. And if they do that ary and February, not in July and i e r pe | - » ag AY W ¢ 3 > 11 (ill bri them asrfect i Au . I { as well as they would wish, then their effort w ring r 3 g | satisfaction. he | BELLEVILLE PAPER That old C.R.U. * semi-official I paper is again on the rampage over the hint that Queen's may not enter Canadian finals again. It has | adopted the attitude tht it 1s of little import. But the majority of GENERAL REVIEWS u sport. i At both Kingston and Belleville PRASES "SMTRY" Recently | folks know different and such a thing would hit them hardest where | it hurts most--in the box office. If Varsity were to drop out also, then | | { ! i 1 | | | { ~-- "The National Smoke™. WiLson's >. Still The Most For The Money | BASEBALL OWNERS FROWN ON BASKETBALL PLAYING | With football out of the way and | basketball about ready to occupy | the centre of the sport page, ths | worries of major league club own. | ers and managers have considerably | increased. A number of major league play- ers, as well as many minor league stars shine in basketball. Profession- during the past few years more "faces have been won Dy flukes and 'shifts of winds than on their merits. : open water racing appeal to sailors up this end of Ontario. Another feature certainly | Elected Athletic the Canadian finals would be next to meaningless, Stick at Queen's Popular { | There. i | Strange to say we have not heard any mora of that $112 which | | The Belleville Ontario says: Suc- | Secretary Hewitson did not get. Words come freely and are easy to | cess in athletics, along with a bril-| handle--but when it comes to shekels it takes a mighty good man to will add Interast in the race IF the Freeman Cup, that was do- Bed to promote long distance rac ing, and ever since the famous race fi 1920 from Hamilton to = King- in a gale of wind, lake yachts- : look upon a rum to Cobourg _ where the race has déen held to for past two years, as a local affair, '8nd turn up their noses at a fifty OF sixty.mile fight. But Sodus is about thirty miles to the Kast of "Charlotte, which is one hundred from Toronto, and across the y at that. So yachts starting | the race can count on ebout one and thirty miles in any race should there be, as often hap- in August, a southeast wind 1 ' it will make dead buck of it and a long trip--and that sults Toronto sailors fine. 'With the dates for the L.Y.I A" for August, the Inter Lake t Rac,ng Association at Put-in- ly for July other events, such as ile George Cup, Richardson Cup local races may be considered, H arranged to At in with the | racing of the two lakes. me -- George Cup at Chaumont Bay. The George Cup races will "held at Chaumont Bay, $0 dick the Huskie on her | ground, will be no easy atter, 'let alone the rumors that {Bow "R"" will be in evidence for 8 trials there, and the fact that irwana will appear under Marconi . The Richardson Cup fight will he off in Chicago next Septem- f and that lifts from Toronto one if the best and gameit set of races there for a long time. But it to have these international move around, and so stim. la the sailing 'Interest locally. it year Toronto did not have a ve in this series, but it 't be the fault of our sailors ir t don't retrieve thelr "R" boat on Lake Ontario this Ing summer, and so qualify for Face to decide the fastest boat the Great Lakes. ll thik leads us to the fact that be and; own Ty 3 llant course in medicine, is the lot of J. E. Roy Smith, a young man well and. favorably known in Belle. ville. He is a nephew of Samuel Carson; compositor on The Daily | Otatio staff and has visited this city a number of times. His parents are residents of Fort Willlam, his father being foreman of the C.P.R. shops at that point. "Smithy," as he is familiarly known, is in his graduating year of medicine, and while taking his course was promin- ent on the cinder track and base- ball diamond. His career can bet- ter be summed up by an extract from Queen's Journal, which fol- lows: Since entering Queen's with Medi- gine "24, "Smithie," as he is pop- | ularly known, has had probably a | more varied and outstanding Ath- Hetig career than any present stu | dent. in his freshman year he became prominent at the track meet, where he won the 440 yard event, and took second place in the 100 and 220 yard. races. With the Queen's Track Team at McGill he was Queen's strongest representative. This same year of the Queen's Junior Inter. collegiate he won the Harrier Meet and was Captain of the Junior Hoc- key Team which played off with Varsity for the "title, besides re- presenting his Faculty in both hoe- key and rugby. As a Sophomore he won the 100 and 220 yard events at the Track Meet, and was a valuable defepce player on the hockey team which brought the first Intermediate In- tefcollegiate hockey championship to Queen's University. 1921-22 marked a continuance of high standing in athletics. He serv- |.ed as President of the Track Club, and again took first place in the 100 and 220 yard events. "Smithie™ made his bow to jgaiversity rugby and his speed and consistent' work in the role of half-back were strong factors in bringing the Junior Mn- tercollegiate. rugby championship to Queen's. The winter season found him promoted to senior company in hockey, when he made good as a defence player with Queen's first team. : Last year witnessed another suc- cessful season with the Track Club, Smith repeating in .the 100 and 220 events at the annual meet. He again did valuable work with the senior hockey team and was a mem- ber of the champion Interfaculty rugby and baseball teams. A few of the honors Smith pos- sessas aret 12 medals for track rugby work: 6 "M's" for Inter- faculty hockey and rugby; 1 Cana- dian champion long-distance ball- throwing; 1 medal Queen's all- round track athlete, 1921. The above record is unique at Queen's University, representing a high de: gree of success in every major line of sport. "Smithie" has been a booster for Queen's for the past four years on the athletic fleld and merits the high honor of Athletic | Spalding's events, 7 Q's for track, hockey and | beat the Scottish. In this case the Scottish were not beaten Who is the most outstanding figure in Canadian football this year ? What figure has remained supreme in several lines, without any com- petition approaching its greatness by miles ? --Boo-Hoo, the lady bear, Queen's of Mascots. There is only one answer Stick from the student body in his graduating year. Official Baseball Guide, 1923, says: "Smith also earned the right by common con- sent to the title of best alll-round player, his batting" average being 401." She Was Impossible. A young news agent of Cores End, England, applied to the Maidenhead guardians for a wife, describing him- self as "sociable" and "not unattrac- tive." More than 2,500 replies were forthcoming to his offer not - only from England, but from the United States, Canada, Ireland, Scotland, France, Belgium and Constantinople. From this assortment he chose a war widow, thirty-one years old, in "quite comfortable circumstances," living at a Suffolk seaside resort. They ex- changed photographs and it was ar- ranged that the would-be groom go to Lowestoft to meet his bride-to-be. He had, until then, only seen her photograph. She had his photograph, and wrote to him that she kissed it every night. There is still hope for the balance of the 2,500 "'would-be's" for, in the news agent's own words' "When she opened the door to me, I came to the conclusion that the match was impossible." Old Paper Sold. It was announced by Mrs. I. B. Bowell, daughter-in-law of the late Sir Mackenzie Bowell, that The In- y telligencer, the Belleville daily news- paper which for fifty years the for- mer Premier of Canada had directed with great success, had been sold to interests represented by S. B. Daw- son, formerly of Toronto and Strat- ford. Toronto capital, it was an- nounced and some Belleville capital had been represented in the trans- action, An Alibi. Lawyer: "In order to fight this case intelligently I must know, in the first place, whether you are guilty or not." Client: "Well, if you've got to know the truth, I'm guilty." Lawyer: "Good: Now the affair is simple. All that we have got to do is to establish an alibi" Perils of the Social Life. Customer: "Seems to me that razor {s rather dull." Barber: "Mought be, sah. tq a pahty las' night, sah." It was The End, Detroit News. Theatre Manager--You do not seem to have enjoyed the show this evening. z Movie Fan--1 did not; let me ask you, is there any reason why the play should not end happily In- stead of the hero and Neroine al- ways marrying at the last moment? COLLINS IS LIKELY 10 MAKE A SHIFT Chicago Man 'Was Named as| Possible Successor to | When Kid Gleason resigned as manager of the Chicago White Sox, | the general impression was that Ed- | die Colling, captain and star second- | sacker, would succeed him, Under | the Gleason regime, Collins was the | first Heutenant to the Kid, and his views on all questions received the greatest. consideration. -- Collins, who suffered an injury to his knee last season that handl- capped his pay considerably late in the year, has several times express- ed--the desire to manage a major league club before passing out of the big show. The fact that in recent years such stars as Speaker, Cobb and Sisler have taken a fling at the managerial game no doubt fired Collins with the ambition to try it. The appoint- ment of Chance to lead the Sox is considered by many as a direct slap at Collins, It is a well-known fact that Col lins was much disappointed last | spring when the trade with New | York failed to go through. He was one of the White Sox wanted by New York in exchange for Ward and Meusel. Ward's great work at second this year has killed off the probability - of Collins getting a chance with the Yankees. He has always wanted to play in the big city. It is questionable if Collins would be content to play as a private un- der Chance. For that reason he may figure in a winter trade. At present a deal with Washington is being widely circulated, 'making Collins the manager of that club. PROOF PPRRPRP BELONGS > * > AT LAST, * ® -- . 4 The Toronto Telegram has + & at last given Queen's the credit 4 & due them as a football team. ¢ # In a recent jssue the following + + words are to be found: > # \"Queen's have decided in # # the interests of higher educa- # # tion that there will be no more # $C. R. U. finals or semifinals % 4 for them. In other words, the #% greatest team in history will ¢ 4 retire unbeaten." a al teams in this vicinity pay big money which serves as quite a lure | ceived a pay check since October 15th or even earller. Basketball is a strenuous gams and the constant pounding on the hardwood floors often plays havoc with the players' legs, slowing them | up for the summer's play. | « It is said that several major lea- gue clubs have requested certain players to refrain from the court game. Rabbit Maranville says that orders from the Pittsburg club alone keeps him from playing. He i8 a basketball star. | The menace of the basketball game is getting so strong that sev- eral club owners advocate a 12- month contract, that will enable the clubs to have something to say as to what the player shall do in the off season. UMPIRE ROWLAND IS IN A RECEPTIVE MOOD Clarence Rowland, Chicago, who was a member of the American lea- gue staff of umpires last year, fis sajd to he in a receptive mood for a major leagi1e managerial berth. While Rowland did very well in his first year as an umpire, it is said he is far more partial to the job of manager. It took him only a year to discover that there was far more glory in leading a winner than being an efficient umpire; Hal not Ty Cobb decided to take a whirl at managing, Rowland would have probably been placed in charge of the Detroit team as Own- er Frank Navin is said to have look- ed or him with favor. Rowland, who came to the majors from the bushes had a fairly sue- cessful career as manager of the White Sox. He won a pennant and world series, an honor much cher- ished by every manager. At present the only possible va- cancy in the American league Washington and it is understood that Owner Clarke Griffith looks with favor on a playing manager. PROMISING RECRUITS. Bven though Carl Mays is about through, Bob Shawkey slipping and Joe Bush past the peak of his game, Miller Huggins, of the Yanks, is not worrying about pitching. In Pipgras and Roettger he has two of the most promising rookie right- handers in the country. Another year's experience and both will be ready to step in and deliver. | to the ball players who haven't re-i is at | FRIDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1923. TIMELY COMMENT1S Fon wader ane. 4 ol, CHRISTMAS 1923 USEFUL GIFTS ONLY KODAKS, SKATES, HOCKEY BOOTS, PHONOGRAPHS No cheap trash this Christmas, but gifts the Boys and Girls Treadgold Sporting Goods Co * 88 PRINCESS ST. air, your work need not be lost. 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