THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG at Queen's, RMC. Ind Kingston Enter OHA. Series For a Hockey Followers Favor Each Gach ive. Having Its Own Team | and Discontinuing Amalgamation--All Three Should Be Able to Put Out Strong Teams--No Fault to Find with Amalgamation But a Change Evi dently Desired. gE Next month will, or at. least As for Queen's, a strong interme- ould, see the local hockey moguls | diate ng together to see what is going | without interfering to any great ex- happen in hockey circles in Ki ing- | tent with the senior team in the in-{ this coming winter. It will be | torcollegiate series It would pay one too early for Prasident T. A.|! Queen's better to put a strong inter- Kidd, of the Kingston Club, '0 call | mediate O.H.A. b meeting any time now to look over | it does to do so in the senior Inter- is for the season and check up| collegiate. Outside of the material that will be avail-| hockey gate, Queen's get little out of ble, if the Kingston Club intends | to speak of, but perhaps the odd fto continus operations. rilt of feeling that they are loyal Hockey talk has not been much in} he foreground of late, outside of | Loyalty of this kind is all right bat professional lines and attention at| it's no money-maker and that's what the present time seems to be quite! runs hockey teams, and all other firmly riveted to rugby. But there| kinds of teams fqr that matter is only a short space of time between | Equipment costs money, so do arenas the rugby and hockey seasons In!and loyalty alone doesn't pay for I Kingston, with an artificial ice plant | those things it dy to go into operation early in As for Kingston, surely a team Pecember, and therefore it behooves can found in Kingston to put a those officials, who have matters in m in the intermediate 1t nd, to see what is going towns like Brockville, Trenton and pHa. Belleville can put strong teams on While nothing official isbeing quot-| the ice without other help, what's it does not seem as though there! the matter that Kingston can't? a general clinging to the idea that | Kingston fans should have a team of ington and Queen's should againi their own and Queen's and RM.C malgamate into a junior and inter- | should mediate combine in the Ontario Hoc-| in a city like this, to have to join Mey Association series. This opin-| hands all round to get out a hockey fon does not come from hockey offic- | team of good calibre. Fials, who have been quite silent on! Amalgamation with Queen's and | Sthe question so far, but from the| RM.C. in the last two years has not opinions of some of the ardent hoc- heen unpleasant There has been a | Rey fans throughout the city It | fine spirit of co-operation and every- ¥ does not come from any feeling of | thing has gone along beautifully but dissatisfaction' with the amalgama-, there is just one thing lacking in it | tion that has been in operation for| No e group can really call the (he past couple of years but 18 | tea its very own. It's as much elt by some that Kingston should | Queen's as it is Kingston and it's as g big enough to run a team.of its | own and Queen's likewise, fail- | ing fn that, one or the other take the! team into the series ard carry it on | alone. If Kingston can put a team in the LH.A. junior series and one in the | termediate series; all well and! good, and let Queen's do the same | hing, suggests one fan Another { suggests that R.M.C., Queen's and | Kingston all enter teams in the jun-| dor and intermediate series and per-| afresh, each with its own team, the! , haps form a double group with old hockey spirit could be revived | C Brockville, Belleville and Trenton, | again and it would be perhaps bet- |. making more games, more gates and | ter for al] concerned. satisfactory financing conditions for| There may be plenty of arguments all. RM.C., it is pointed out by one! in faver of keeping the amalgama- hockey fan, 'used to be in the O.H.A. | tion plan in vogue and continue that not so very many years ago and | way made a very creditable showing and | that idea. Seould do so again. They would not | hockey. spirit E have to do so very much travelling in |.-amongst most fans. heir own group anyway and there is | tion has done its work. It completed Little reason why they could not join | the job-it started out to do. It help- "up. ed Queen's and it helped Kingston. [8° "Phere is one thing sure" It made a close relation between "Saarked a fan last night, Kingston, RM.C. and Queen's and it "'hockeyists are just wasting good | did much good in many. Ways. time and money to play one or two | not, now that this is all done, go on games in the intercollegiate Seties | from that point and have good and then hang up again for the sea-| friendly and keenly-contested rivalry | Shat R.M.C. is dissatisfied. with that! the reliance of each group and make | condition of things and if you will | interest keener al] round? ember, there was some talk last Arguments to the contrary or in| winter of RM .C. favoring a jump to line with the above will be reesived the O.H.A. because they were not! should any person Or parsons care getting enough games in the intet-|to eubmit them and they will be . collegiate and were losing money on | given courteous and fair considera- thelr hockey investment." tion 3 bi be series to be it or, as much RM.C. as the rest. of the old hockey spirit is a team R.M.C. There never were more ex- citing games in Kingston than when the Frontenacs and Queen's used to play. - The old rink used to be pack- ed to the rafters and R.M.C. and Kingston would start out The return to the old is evidently i | | | | i re. "R.M.C | mn" | save Quinn from the embarrassment | of retaining him any longer. And so He Quit, Boston, Oct. 26.--Les Fohl has re- signed as manager of the Boston Am- League Baseball Club. Presi- Two Stars Stay. t Robert Quinn said that he had| Port Arthur, "Oct. 26.--A report | Sno other course than to accept the | from Windsor.that Art Chapman and | 'resignation, that he had made no Albert Pudas would play there this plans to replace Fohl, and that he | winter is denied here. President | phably would not take any action | Pounsford of the Port Arthur Hoc- | some time to come. key Club says: "Windsor spoke a Fohl wrote thatowing to many re- | day too soon. Pudas and Chapman | he had read, supposedly eman- i have agreed to stick with the rest of from Boston, which criticized | the team here in Port Arthur. work as manager, he wished to | nt jean i i : i a | { simmons gave Jess Willard his first | boxing lesson... to say in regard to this is that it is' very bad taste to make such nasty | edial and Junior ¢ a or cracks about a man who is dead. i. While it may be true that gentle- | men prefer blonds, there are times | a well stocked ice box is at least | passably welcome. Having persuaded Mr. Cashand. | carry to cough up $100,000, you might say stage cough was not in vain. much Kingston as it is Queen's and What Kingston' needs for a revival | of ita'own in the O.H.A. and Queen's | can stand the same thing and so can | it Queen's, | If so, none have been met with | desired | The amalgama- | Why | It has been known before this! and put hockey in Kingston back wu | A veteran scribe writes Bob Fitz-| .All that we have | COMING a | -- | spoRTING NOTES AND COMMENT | | wrong. fens Jacobs to to Get White Sox Trial in 1927. een sea team could be.put on the ice | i team on the ice than: the Varsity | to the Intercollegiate Hockey Union. | ELMER JACOBS Elmer Jacobs, right-handed er, wili get another big league next season He's to go south wi the Chicago White Sox. Jacobs spent some time with the Chicago Cubs be- fore being turned back to Los An geles in the Pacific Coast League. hurl th It should not be necessary/The big fellow's out to stick on his second chance. HURLS CAUSTIC : WORDS IN KINGSTON DIRECTIO Toronto Telegram Takes Up Cudgel in De- fence of Toronto. A writer commenting on the attitude a Kingston paper which has risen in its wrath and given voice to opinions | that appear to be rather prevalent outside the city says: ¢ | As axresult of of f city the appellation of Hog Town, { which we must not fail to live up to. "With our large population from | | hope which to pick athletes (all of whom, of course, are. born and brought up | ' we have a divine right | | in Toronto), {to win all the sporting honors and | championshi ps on the cards. If any smaller place (such as ngston) has | the audacity to wrest at from us-- well, thing sinister about it." Quite in Order. | "Our peerless footballer, | sity ad infinitum---that is, quite in order--bhut we can't see why Harry | Batstone should have the hardihood to remain at Queen's over one ses- sion. "We had our alibi all polished up for 'a loss at the Varsity | but as Queen's did not win, reset much type. had to NERA Lz i The victory of the Queen's team | on Saturday over McGill shows what a real team. In the game against « Toronto Varsity, even though in- | Juries of the Queen's men were taken | {into consideration, many of the | Queen's supporters shook their "heads and felt that Queen's would | different. be unable to make the grade to land a fifth championship in the Intercol- | legiate race, But to-day things are -- i After being held for a period by | | the McGill men, Queen's began to | | assert themselves and brought back memories of former days when they ploughed and ripped through the | McGill line almost at will and pro- ceed to smash up any attempts that | MGI might make to gain through | extended passing. Perhaps few realize the yery ime | portant part that Walker and Brit. | ton did in breaking up McGill's back- | 1 limits of Toronto, | of going through. these opinions, | real, there has been attached to our fair | the { letic honors | there must be some- | i | { Warren | Snyder, may prolong his stay at Var-/| field plays. Not only by their work did they two men break up the plays | in which they figured but they slow. ly and surely broke McGill's spirit | trial and threw confusion into the place of confidence, when Taken utterly aback they could their planned f backfield passing, the McGill men were at a distinct disadvantage and this fact helped materially in bringing about { their downfall. not advance method by It is hard to tell what can happen in two weeks but right at the pre- sent moment there is a general feel- ow that Queen's will do as much to McGill at the Molson Sadium a week Writer | from next Saturday as they did bere | last week. One can hardly see where McGill can defeat the Queen's team, going as it is to-day. Of course in- : | juries and unforeseen circumstances in the Toronto Telegram, | are. apt to creep in on the best of teams but particular precautions will be taken to guard against anything that is apt to curtail Queen's chances McGill, assuming to Queen's in Mont- would confer a great favor on local university by trimming | Varsity in Toronto next Saturday. { Right now, however, it looks like a less task. that they lose Queen's seniors were not called on | to do anything yesterday afternoon but preparations were launched for the Tricolor intermediates and jun- lors to get into final shape for their first games against RM.C. inter- mediates and juniors next Saturday. It is hard to tell just. yet what kind of material the junior teams of either college wiil be able to field. Most of the youngsters will be get- ting their baptism of real | Saturday's game but the intermedi- | ate material is better known. Stadium | If Queen's will only | | continue to lose, all will be forgiven | everything will 'automatically ad- Coach Oran Carson has a collection of foot. ball players that will be mighty hard te beat in intermediate football. He has a line that fooks Tike a million { dollars and with any kind of a back- just itself, and be fair amd above- | field should go a long way with his | team. | board once again. i "It pays to howl--apparently Carl | Voss thought it better to give up { athletic s and attend to study, rather { than become the butt of unpleasant | notoriety and insinuations f we could howl.a Aittle louder, per- { haps Batstone and a few others | might quit and allow us to march unhindered and unopposed to a glor- | fous and exciting victory--prov ding McGiil or Ottawa do not play any { underhand tricke. { | down the road to the right, f only| But over across the Causeway and there is a team doing duty every day that threatens to create a few surprises. Coach Bill Haghes of Queen's freely admits that RM.C. have a powerful team and so does Coach Carson. If RM.C, have any idea that they are | being underrated, the impression is | "It might even be possible for Me-! Gill or Ottawa to win and yet play fair, provided that they do not win | | oftener than twice in the next twenty rodrs. The other eighteen years | Town's. "For Heaven's {ourselves together, | gracefully and lose in a sportsman- {11ke ! manner. It is possible, even { probable, that the "sporting sake, let us should 4ormally, of course, be Hog | pull | and try to win * rumor | mongers®and alibl artists do not re-| present the actual | ity as a whole. If this is the case, | | we have cause to be grateful." opinion of the' : : Some people are merely speaking | | anything. ) _ BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES Ja Lenglen's celebrated | their minds when they refuse to say | | C--O -------------- | 2 ¥ Ses P SINS | cap to no one. fire in | Gin } { here, It is a strong team, full of | | fight and. pep and with two teams | ean be Sedmplishaiin one week by tke: Queeny'st seconds xnd RAM | firsts in action, local fans are bolind | to see sterling football all the way through the piece. It will be an idie {day for Queen's seniors but local | | fandom will be out en masse to see fast and furious intermediate inter | cpllegiates step to the barrier to de- | cide the issue in the first game.-| Points count on the round mn the! | series and there will be no letup from either side. » i i that and 4 -- V There's one satisfaction comes from defeating McGill | that's the absence of what is com- i monly known as "squawking" after it's all over. Globe--Harry Batstond will have | plenty of degrees when he graduates | i in medicine in 1932 at Quecn's Uni. | versity, He has already qualified in Commerce, and it has long been suspected that he has graduated in "Engineering," this latter being in reference to his ability to start win- ning attacks on a football field. Mail--It was pathetic to watch the | work of the officials on Saturday in the Argonaut-Tiger game. There was no question as to their honesty, but they lacked contidence in them- sclves to handle such an important match. When officials have to cons sult with one another and hold up the game continuously, like the pair did at the stadium, they soon lose the respect of both the players and the crowd. An official has to give snappy judgment at all times and he is not officiating very long in & game before the players and spectators know whether he is conversants with the rules. The Big Four erred when they changed the officials for the game and sent here two inexperienc- od men, who appeared to be afraid | of their own judgment, Globe--Queen's University's 14.to. 0 victory over McGill did not exact. ly shock those who have been in close touch with both aggregations, McGill lacks high-class material, and the Tricolor, with Carl Voss teaming with Harry Batstone, bows the faded The three Intercol- legiate Union semior teams are now tied, with one victory and one defeat each, but to win the title the Uni. versity of Toronto aggregation will have to defeat Queen's at Kingstom | on Nov, 138th, win at Molson Stadium. McGill will | be here to play against the Blue and | White next Saturday, and on Nov. 6th the Tricolor will play fu Mont- real. -- Mail--The champion Ottawa team have now a strangle hold on the Big Four, and while it is yet possible for a tie, such a thing is very improb. able. Queen's easy victory over Mc. makes the Intercollegiate a three-cornered tie and the champion- hip will no doubt go to the team winning the first game away from! home. Balmy Beach are out in front in the O.R.F.U, with a clean sheet, | but Varsity are finishing strong and may tie the East Enders for the lead- i ership. i ------ ---------- Morenz Signs Again. Stratford, Oct. 286 All rumors as | to where "Howie" Morenz would play this winter were set 'at rest when it was learned on good authority that | he had signed with the Canadi®tmsg, | and at a salary that will make him | | one of the highest pald puck ehasers { in the sport. Morenz, who is now in| Cleveland, in a letter toa "trie 11 stated that he was 1 { fled with his new contract | pects to be days around Nov. 1st. Mary K. Brown was the first pro-! | fessional tennis player in the United | | States. be closer the first .Or it might to | the truth to say she was professional to admit ft. Jack Dempsey to Jack "You made me what I am hope the syndicate editors Kearns, | to-day, 1 i | fied." i gi when a brunet with her own car and | Helen Wills, denying her reported | engagement, insists she is too young | to marry. ... Forty love? Queen's will likely | Stratford for a fow i { te | are satis. = | Slamese twins Produce them from your pocket fresh sealed in the convenient pack that preserves their perfect condition. ------------ ----------------, SA --------. THOMAS COPLEY Carpenter \"Phone 087 See us for all kinds of Onrpentry work. Estimates given on new floors iald. Have your hardwood foors cleans ed with our aew floor cleaning mae chine. Hard Wood Choice Body Hardwood, Soft Mixed Wood. Rindling and Slabs, Chas. Bedore & Son 840 NELSON STREET 'Phone 1746J. The KINGSTON CLEANERS AND DYERS Clean anything that can be cleaned C. COE & P. BARRETT Office: 56 Arch Street. 'Phone 1230w Call sad deliver. A onto Memorials Before placing your order for Monuments call and inspect our stock. Cemetery Lettering a specialty. J. E. MULLEN TELEPHONE 417. Corner of Princess and Alfred Streets. Afternoon Bowling Ladies and Gentlemen, Attention ! From this date, Afternoon Bowling of five pins will be at the rate of ten cents astring on all afternoons with the exception of Saturdaysand Holidays. Venetian Gardens Bowling Academy Harrison Building Phones 290, 2820 Full Course Dinner 55¢ WE INVITE YOU TO VISIT OUR RESTAURANT WHICH HAS BEEN ENTIRELY RENOVATED AND REDECORATED See our new paintings, done by Chinese Art Student. "A Player Piano with Full Orchestral Accompaniment," FIRST-CLASS MEALS OPEN 6 AM. TO 230 A.M. THE CROWN CAFE PHIL P TOY, Manager 208 Princess Street : 13 Telephone 2836 Dr. J.D. Kellogg's old reliable Asthma Rem- ely is a simple but effective relief for Asthma and Hay Fever. It is composed of herbs, the fumes of which when burned, quickly and effective- ly relieve all irrita- tion. Acts safely and surely. Manufactured by NORTHROP & LYMAN COMPANY, LIMITED Toronto Canada Il do anything to : We see by the papers the queen of Spain bas gone back to long skirts A Eome women Wi tir George Burns of the Indians js ti new doubles champio Just b this affects the old of is not act attention status known