h Island Centremen Find Range For Six Goals In 7-3 Win Over Sydney The Charlottetown Islanders vuilt up I 6-0 lead and then coast- ed home to whip the second place Sydney Millionaires '1-3 in a Mari- .ime MBj0l' Hockey League game ,llayed before 1380 fans at the. Forum last night. Little Gerry Lachance, smooth skating pivotman of the potent, Lac-hance, Carver and Gignac llnel fir:-d three goals past Norman De- telice in the Sydney net to pace the improving Islanders attack. Playing coach Wes ”Bucko" Trainer, back up at centre ice af-l tar months fill-in duty on defense, .cnrcd two goals, set up one ntore and has robbed of a third goal by the boil a fraction of a second be- fore the contest ended. Buck Whitlock and Don "Pea- nuts" MacLauglilin were the other, islanders ntarksnii-n with Mac- Iaughlin scoring his first goal of the sP.'lS(lll on a zlnging slap shot from the liliielinc. Whitlock's goal was his liftccntli for the year. "Stall The Man" MacDougall, Roger Dubuc anti playing Coach Terry Reardoii scored for the Nlllliriiiai-rs. Dubuc and Reardon. ilzisliczl lllE' rcd light in the filial pcriod hllcr M;lcDougall spoiled Roger Bcsscltcis bid for a shutout late in the second. The I.-lanrlcrs. altlinllgh they out-l I incrgiri did not cnjoy such a wide -lclnc on play. They did show morel lincssc arolmd the he; probably brrauss! Roger Bcssette in the Is- landers cane turned in a strong game. Play was fairly even in the first lWl'lOfI although the Islanders werel lctidiiig 3-0 when the session end- ed. The Islanders controlled play in the middle frame but in the third session the Millionaires came back to apply the pressure. The customarily poor ice for I Monday night game again slowed the progress of last night's con- test. The Millionaires, who play. at the Forum on most of the Mon- day nights haven't seen a decent sheet of ice here this season. , A high temperature at the end the second period hampered the last nf lroezling conditions for part of the game. Roger Bessette showed brilliant form for the Islanders especially in the opening period when he stopped at least five breakaway shots. George Robertson, the trickyl Sydney centre. who played another strong game for the Moneymen, was his first victim when Besaette beat him from close range. Terry Reardon, Stan MacDougall, Cowan Ind Dubuc all had point blank chances but were outguessedl by the Islanders nctminder. Lachanca scored the Islanders first two goals. At the 5.26 mark he slapped in Glgnack rebound and on the play Defellce re-in- lured his hip. The Sydney goalie, was injured in Halifax Saturday. night and as a result was operat- ins under difficulties throughout the game. Lachance fired a 20 foot back- " hander past Defelice for the Is- l”"l”l'5 Vmnd Wall H9 "Wk 'l D”5l Carver, llenncsscy, Ritchie, Gignar-,:Leati'U0 Dolllt lvarade from Carver at the bluclinc and raced past three Sydney defenders to score. Ti-ainor rounded out the acoi-lngl for the period by converting Hen- ncssey's pass-out from the comerl Time of the goal was 15.01. Bnb Gray and Kubinec were alt-I ting out majors when the second, period opened. After one minutey and fifty-three seconds of play Tralnnr raced over the blueline al-j ter MarL.1ugh1in's pass and cut in on nct. to backhand a low ihot .nto the Sydney cage. p Six minutes later following I: face-off in the Sydney end Mac- Laughlln laced a slap shot from the biuellne that sank into-the rordage in the back of the net just' as Defelice was making his ntovci to strip the screened drive. Less than it minute later La-J Chance broke away to score his: third goal. His last second shotl was partially blocked by Dcfellce but the. goal judge ruled that the' puck crossed the. line and allowedl the goal despite a strong Sydney protest. MacDougall finally broke through. Bessntteis armour at the 1510 mark when he scored from an almostl impossible angle after taking I pass from Gordie Cowan. i Just before the bell sounded lo: I T FORUM EVENTS ' NOV. 24 - 28 l'I7ESI)AY- Children's Skating . 4 in l.:.'l0 General Skating . 8 to 10 W'El)NESl)AY- . General Skating .... -..... 8 to 10 Tl!ITlLSDAY- General Skating . . 8 to 10 FlllDAY- Children's Skating I to 5:10 HOCKEY--GLACE BAY 8:30 I SATURDAY- General Skating ............ .. 3 to 5 The Popular Country-City skating 8 to 10 -.......j.m NOTICE TO IIORSEMEN 'All Interested In winter lasing are requested to at- Ind I meeting in the Fox Puma. hhibltiol Grounds IIIISDAY, NOV. 24th 'the Sydney winger Halls Sydney Goalie Roger Besseltn Iabn-,.i held the Sydnny sharp sihootersl this Millionaires in an MMHI. am:-. Bessetie played a fiilc game. throughout especially Ill the first period when the Millionaires poured rubber at him from point. blank range .'lYKl could not find a weak spnt. end the period Whitlocl: iiet Sain- don up perfectly at the goal mouth l nose in I bmvl behind the Is-l but Defeliee oiitguessea the Island 1anders' net one night. There was; forward. Cowan sent Dubuc into the clear for the Millionaircs second goal early in the third period and made no mis- take as he picked the corner from twenty feet out. Buck Whitlock deflected for the Islanders final goal Terry Reardon rounded out scoring for the night by counting on n 30 foot screened slap shot. Robertson, Dunc Maclntyrc. -Pirie and Gordie Conan turned in strong games for Sydney with Mac-' Intylre back on the forward line. Don Machaughlin played an ef- fective hard-hitting game on the Islanders defense. Dgfenseinan Gus Gustaveson and forward Paul sain- don of the Islanders drew miscon- duct penalties in thc last period for insulting referee Cy Taylor. Lineups: Sydney- Goal: Defcllce; de- fence: McDonald. Matthews. Reardon: forwards: Guay, Pirle. Robertsoii. Cowaii. Kubinec. Mc- Dougall, Marshall, Dubuc, Mac- Intyre. Charlottetown -- Goal: Besaetlc; defence: Gustavason. klackburii. MacLaughlin. Lelalanrz forwards: Whltlock. Lachance, Gray Salndon. Trainnr Officials: Cy Taylor. Art Perry and Johnny Square-briggs. SIIMMARY First Period l-Charlottetown, Lachancc (Carver, Gignac) : 2-Charlottetown. Lacharicc (Carver. Glgnarl 14:19 3-Charlottetown, Tralnnr II-Iennesseyi 15:04 Penalties: Whitlock I126, Cnwan 4:08. Gray and Kublnec 19:07 majors. Second Period 4-Charlottetown, Trainor (MacI.aughllni 1:53 5-Charlottetown, .VicLaughlin (Trainorl . 7:35 6-Charlottetown, l.aCharice (Carver, Gignaci 8:51 '7-Sydney. McDougall t'Cowrml 15:15 Penalty; Kubinec 11:40. Third Period 8-Sydney. Dubuc (Oowan. McDougs.ll) 9-Charlottetown, Whltlock 3:26 (LeBlancl . 7:17 l0--Sydney, Reardoti ((,'.0WBli. McDnugall) 17.15 Penalties: Kubiiiec 8:19. Sain- clon R119 minor and niisczncluct. Cnwan 9:03, CIUSIRVFSOH 12:12 misconduct. Stops Dcfcllce ll 9 9-316 1'-lessctte in 5 6-".11 Hockey Scores By THE CANADIAN PRESS Maritime Mnjnr Sydney 3 Charlottetown 'l Antlgonlsh-Plctou-Colcheaior Antlgonlah 0 Btelliu-ton 7 Nnrthern Ontario Senior A Sault Ont. 2 Pembroke 1 Celebrate COIIRIE Mack's Birlhilay PI-IILADELPHIA. (AP)--For the Diet time A birthday cake was ad- mired end then eaten in honor of Connie Mack, the fabulous figure of baseball. But Connie, who sampled ii piece of the cake him- self. made the biggest fuss over it birthday congratulatory note from another famous sport.sm:m--Prcsi- dent Eisenhower. Comic, once manager of the Philadelphia Athletics and now president of the club, will observe his Dist anniversary on the actual birthday-Dx. 28. But members of the Reciprocity Club here decided that Connie should have an old-fashioned Phil- adelphia observance of the big day and lines Connie will be in Call- fomla or Florida next month they put 8 pm". dltghkdwoa Thursday night. the Charlottetown Islanders procilre the scrvlces of left wing- er John Bailey, who is nowplayinig with Saskatoon Quakers. they will have in their lineup one of the best built hockey players in Maritlmes. l'lng hockey lhe most muscled player that the , In three years of vls-p clubs' dressing rooms: VH3 l l have seen 15 none other than Jolinl Bailey, a young man whom Bud Polle not only regarded as quite A, y , lat bay, while the Islanders built hockey player lmwd Ill? Nl”l0l”l'l'95 by 3 healthy up ii 6-0 lcatl last night to whip .fair hand in the art of but also a pretty l.lll'OWlIl(.', plliinhcs. When Poilc spoke ;BalIey he spoke pliockey in one breath. course were the days of Phil Vitalc land JnhnnyDutchak, two of Poileis ,favorlte disooursing subjects fol- lowing a hockey game. . . . We neier aaw BRIIFY ,punch in the Maritimes itltihougli lwe did see Phil Vltale fracture his la pileup along the boards follow- ed by an argument and the first dlilng we knew Big Phil had laced Bailey ii-itlh two smashing rights to the nose. On his way to the dressing room Bailey stopped at centre ice, pointed his stick at Em Vitale who was seated in the pen-l LeBlanc's 40 foot shot into the H93 ally box by this time. and swm'e' Blue Bnmhcrs, and . vengeance on Big Phil. Before the , rescnlatives in the 195:: Grey Cup the ', night wastover he repaid his debt final at Toronto this Saturday, is lby scoring two third period goals lto give bhe Miners 1 one 1 tory. I O l Coach Bucko Trainnr' Vl'0ll'li know luntil late tonight or Wednesday 'morning if he will be getting Ball- ley. Trainor has been given the lgo-ahead to deal with Saskatoon lfor Bailey and Chuck I-Ioldaway the left winger who played with the Islanders a year ago. He was in touch wltih Saskatoon last week. as reported at the time, and was ltold that'an answer would be given after tonightls game in Saskatoon. It. would appear that will release I-Ioldaway but they 3 cant quite make up their mind . about Bailey. Holdaway is the lproperty of the Rangers and Ball- ey of the Cleveland Barons. O O Q A look at the Western Hockey for games ll1lR.l'etl up until November Rlh re- lvealed that only times Saskatoon players were above. Bailey in the scoring race. In the first is gnmeg Ell-lley had picked up three goals '&l1d four assists. He also ranked -llllll lll penalties and there were only nlne Dll1.Vh:a in the entire .League above him in this respect. In mlwll Ramos he had served ltwenty-live minutes in line cooler which is not quite an average of 1 "”"0l' PF-lllllly Der game. Evidently the referees in the W. H. L. are fairly lenient or they play clean hockey in the West. 0 O O HOIGBWES. I. notoriously slnw starter, has not seen ncahly M lll'UCl;l service as Bailey, The yoiiiii: plrft winger, who had it. hard i,.b getting untracked last season 6.1;.- llt" mn955- 3PD8l'Elllly is havlnr: ltrouble getting underway thls pycar. At the end of last aeasnzi XI-Ioldaway was as good a left wing. er as there was in the League and he showed morn promise mm l l any other young player in him Clltfllll. However, Saskatoon arc having their troubles right now and apparently Can't wait to see lif he will develop as the season goes along. l C O D The Islanders arc beginning in llmDl'ess more each izamn as thr lscason roll: along and by tho 'l0nks of tizegs Buc-ko Traintir lwill hnvc thc squiul back in the thick of the light. for nrst place by lchrlstmas. The linc of Carver. Ln- Chance and Glgnnc is playing fine hockey and right now looks like the best combinations in the League. Trainor has the third line going well while the first string of Whltlock. Snlndnn and Grail can always be counted upon for goals. I A fellow who has been improv- ing with each game iii Elwood Rltchlc. The big rlgiht winger is skating fa.-it. carrying lho puck well and will give anyone 11 fight for his berth. He has also been valuable as a penalty killer. To- night when the Islanders play in Sydney they will be minus Buck Whltlock while the Millionaires will likely have my Lacrolx in imlrnrm. Lacroix has been side- illned with a leg injury, Tlhc la- landers will make the trip to Syd- ney by car. Announce Team: For Rose Bowl Game 103 ANGELES, (AP) - UCLA was unanimously selected Monday to represent the Pacific Coast con- ference against Michigan State of the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl It Pasadena. HISTORIC CHAMBER The first house of assembly for Prince Edward Island. then A sep- arate WWW. Opened in 7111., g . Those cflthe S). lM.M.I-I.L. game at the Forum. -goal vic- l Saskatoon . (lctii Ccntremcn Buck.-i Tralnnr and Gerry Lachancc irigrhti scor- 9l loci five goals between them last :l')ll'lPl' goal at the end of the game Ol llllllllllll Mldlnicht as thc Islanders trounccd but time ran nut. by H fl'act'rJn of dney Millionaires 7-3 in an a second and the officials ruled Laohance got the hat. trick a Blue Bombers Coach Hard To Get Along With l ,LL (By Al Vick:-ry, ('tin:ulinn Press Staff W'rlterl p WINNIPIGG, tCP)--Cicorgc Trai- lton isnt the casiest guy in thc iworltl to get along with; some think he's the worst. But the coach of the hVll'1I1ll)('El t he IV:-st's rcp- one of the first to admit it. "I came up here to coach foot- yhall, not to be A public relations ,man.'' says tlir liery Trafton. l”Surc. I get sore wlicn somebody rilbs me the wrong way. Who doesn't?" In his three years at Winnlpe: -he still has one year to go on .1 three-year contract-the burly fnrmcr Nritrc Damc and Chicago star has had several hruslics lwilli club execiitivcs, ni-wspnpcr land radio men, and some fans. "I'Il'er,x body viants to he .1 cnacli. If all these people ltnow su lnllllll lnlinllt forithrill. thcii what in Hill ,h---- did they hrliig run up licrc lfor." says the 56-year-old coach. 'iLast year. I grit the. club into first place. We lost the playoffs. iso I get pamlcd. This ycnr, wr ipzirc nursclvrx and finish third. ll still get it." Trafton says when Bombers walloped Saskatchewan Rougl-irid- ers 43-5 in the first game of this season's two-game total - point semi-final, "evr-ryhndy climbed on lilie. hand wagon and thcra was nn room for the drivel”. A wt-ck earl- ier. the driver had no one to talk .. ;'This is the grealcst city for rumors and criticism I've. ever zlieen in." Traltnn claims. ldinn football is a cnlnrllll SlllTl"- l'l'herc's lots to write and t:lllx' about without chasing ru lworrylng whcthcr I sold m)' canned." Chili Sn"!-rl "It's the hall club that KIIHPFS by thcsc runinrs: nobody 0159." Traflnn probably is one of thc lliardcsl-working rnaclics ion and off ihc fir-ld. I A strong advocate of the T-for niation. he says: ”'I'ha U. S. Na- tional Leaglle teams all use it, so it's good enough for me." Trriftnn also places the. empha- sis nu dcfencc. llc has had the lclilh in the playoffs cvcry ycni p since he took nver. In 1951, llir gtcnm dropped a sudden-dmitli yscini-final to Ellmnnton. Last Xtlali, llilonlbr-rs rlrnpp:-cl the odd gnnic iii llhe lwst-of-tlircc final to Eskimo.-:. lull rcycrsctl tlm pntlcrii this lscnsnn against the Eskimos. Prior to this year's scmi-fiii.il against Riders. Trafton prctlictetlp Bombers would "go all the way".l lHe's only one game away from lmaking that. prediction a reality. Boxing Day: Born in Chicago. Dec. 6. 1RSl(1.l Trafton started his football career Rtksemen To Organiie Winter Racing Club A meeting of horsemen to or- ganize a Winter Racing Club at the Charlottetown Driving Park will be held tonight. at the Fox Pavilion on the Exhibition Grounds at eight o'clock. The meeting is being called by a group of horsemen who have received the permission of the management of the Driving Park Raceway to hold winter races. According to plans the horsemen will commence racing around the middle of December. They intend to race half and quarter mile heats on the exhibition track. Racing will probably be carried out on Wednesday and Saturday after- noons iilong the same lines as that held on the Halifax Commons each winter. ' They're All Coaches I house or whether I'm going to gcll while Trainor scored two and as- .SlSC.Pd on another, Buckn had an- that the goal did not count. in 1918 at Nnlrc Danie under the ,famcil Knulc Rockne. Alter grud- uation he joined the professional ,'Chicago Stiileys-later the Bears '--in 1920. playing centre 13 years. .110 was lClil'll t'&'l1llZlln 10 )cars. I Rctlrinrz as an nctiyc plziycr in ,,lSl3.'l, Trafton started A large ,gymnaslum in Chicago the follow- ing year. At one time he held A 10 per-cent interest in Joe Louis' contract and did some boxing nn NOVEMBER 24. 1953 'iiounccd from London last night. 37 Roman Ford Slill Leading MMHL - Poinl Parade Billy Ford of the Halifax At-f lantics continues to lead the Mari- time Major Hockey League point scoring parade with a total of 41 points for all game played to date. The Islanders Buck Whitlock, a familiar name at the top of the scoring lists, moved into third place during the past week. He has 34 points one less than the Atla.ntic's Pete Wywrot. Following are the statistics: Ford, I-I .. 24 Wywrot, I-I Saindon, C . Brown, GB l-lollett. Ii Rochford, GB Trainor. C Fylcs, GB Queen Square Does Well In . Rifle Shooting Piling up an average of 89.8 the Queen Square School Cadet Corps, of this city, was fourth highest. in Canada, in the com-p DPIIIIOTI conducted by the British National Rifle Association in Commonwealth countries. The local school was in 35th place in the overall Commonwealth coni- petition. The results were an- u-....a..-law i-aucn:-aoiu high-at-It--an-5:!-I an ouocom-1 .- one saumuuuuuum t'.'!2Qc:)e-h:ibU!r- LONDON, KCP) - A 30-man team of crack shots from the Westdale secondary school cadet 'his own. He fought Prlmn Car- ncra. on:--timn world champion. :hut his claim in famn as a fighter was his knockout over Arthur The Great Shires in Chicago sla- dium. His love for football, however. grcw ton strong and Gcorgc was ,lini'k in the big timc again in 19-14 tiftcr an nhscncc of 12 years. llc truck a job as assistant roach. lat Grccn Bay iindcr Curly Lam-I bean, and the Packers won the NFL cliainpinnsllip. Traftnn switchctl to Cleveland tlic follnuinl: iclir wilt-rc thc llama il'(ll'flTPlWilllt'llll'.'.llll rcm.'ii'i- Ni ii: nvzislalit conch wlicn tlic. Rams ninvr-tl their franchise to !.I,ns Anrzclcs In 1946. I-Ic ht-ld thcl ljnh until 1950, when he took nvrr la: 5 public rclations rlircctnr.' I-Ic lwcnt. to lVinnipcg ln I951. l lBIue Boinbers leave Today corps of Hamilton. 0nt., won the Imperial Challcngc Scnlor Shield for rifle shooting in the 1952 Commonwealth competition, it was announced today. The Hamilton team, coached by Maj. G. R. Allan, ran up I nEar- perfect average score of points to take the title of most cfficicnt. unit. Some 28.500 youthful marksmen throughout the Commonwealth took part in the competition us- ing .303 calibre rifles. Top award of the competition the King George V Trophy open in countries with teams of 3.000 nr more mcmhcrs. went to South Africa with an average of 85.4 points. Canada took second with 79.9 and Britain was third with 78.2. Scores for the competition, con- ducted by the British National Rifle Association. are forwarded hy Commonwealth countrlel through their departments of na- tional defence. The results are compiled here. and awards made hy the association. in Montreal Blips A Montreal Ichool. Ecole Super- ;For Torbiilo . il WINNIPEG, (CF) -- Winnipeg ”Ciinn- Blue Bombers will leave here to- and 1952 dpfenders, slipped badly day by plane for Toronto to coin- plcte training for Saturday's Grcy mors anrlicup filial, ,a club spokesman an-commonwealth lnounced Monday night. The western champions, who de- fcntctl Toronto Balmy Beach 24-4 in the Cup semi-final hcrc Satur- day. prcvimisly had planned to complete training at lhoir own field in nearby St. Boniface. l Freezing weather and snow -made conditions miserable here lll (W "and posed tltc threat of ri. possiblcylnhn aila. Football is his hobby Nlrl lll-Vflight delay Friday. After lining up John. lhiisincss. lic work: his team lizird-lmmmg facjljmgs in me (IQQL club Marie cf” lofliririls dccldcd on the switch. - Site of the Wilinipcg training camp in the east was not an- nounced immediately, but It was lhellcvcd it would be at at. An- tlrcu".-; Cnllcge. Aurora. 0nt., 24 miles north of Torrinto. . Wanted To Print counterfeit Tickets WINNIPEG. (CPl- A middle- ltgcd man who attempted to have 300 counterfeit Grey cup tickets printed in a Winnipeg printing shop fled Monday whcii El shop official rcfuscd. I "I don't know who he was," the rilflclal said. ”l-lo left in an awful rush when I told him what I thought of his scheme." Police Chief Robert Taft. said police are on the lookout for any- one attempting to print or distrib- ute cnunlerfelt tickets. Similar at- tempts have been reported -in other cities in previous years. Demand for tickets here is high. The Winnipeg Football Club has received applications for 4.500 tick- ets; 'ils allocation is 3.800. Siellarlon -In 7-6 Win Over Si. EX. STELLARTON, N.s.. tCP)-stel- larton Royals acored two-third period gonlii to defeat St. Francis Xavier University 7-0 Monday night and increase their lead in the Antignniiih - Plctou - 0olcheiI- tor Senior Hockey League, To Late To clasgfv TO LET - FOUR ROOM. HEAT- ed apa1'l.mt-nl. ground floor. Adults. Possession 20th Decem- ber. Dial 8476 after 5. lr-ure St. Stanislas. twice winners of the senior shield in three years inylhe current competition. They finished 38th among the 100 top teams with an average of 88.5. ; Other Canadian averages: 20. Springhlll high lschnoi c.c.., Sprlnghill, N. s.. SR6; Iii. King's County Academy t,.C.. Kcntvillc. N. S., 91.0; 85.- Qucan Square. School C.C.. Char- piougmwn 89.8; 49. Liverpool C.C.. lI.iverpnol, N.S.. 86.2; 69. Saint l High School c.c.. Saint NP. 34.5; 89. St. Cocir dc Shcdiac, NR, -6- Ncwkllrcsident Of Hockey Club smith ManFariane of Harring- t.on was elected president of the Islanders Hockey Club last night at. a special meeting of the exec- titlvc. He. is a fnixner president of the Co-op. Movement on P.E.I. and was also temporary manager of the super-Market. Ivan Docherty was elected first vice-president and Leo Doucette aectmd vice-president. The secre- tary treasurer is Jim Mnccnllum and the assistant secretary-treat urer Charlas Prwught. Other mem- bers on the executive are Keith Myers. -Hampton, and Roy Mac- Glllvary. standings and Proinises Jobs To Prisoners CLEVELAND, (OP)-The presi- dent of the Cleveland Indians Baseball club Monday promised jobs to 22 lervicamen if they quit Comrrniimiat prisoner-of-war camps in Korea and come home. Myron H. Wilson Jr, who said he. would nak the other 15 major league presidents to join him, as- suring throaptured men of. jobs in baseball or private industry. oil-cakes use-dS.fo-r cattle feed in Britain are made mostly of lin- seed, cotton and or soy beans. ANCIENT DIILLIII Water and brine wells cf doqi as 3,500 feet were drilled in Cbl .t.heu.ny Planners Of By JIM nA.a'rA.3l..ll: Canadian Press Stan Writer TORONTO. (OP) - The Grey cup parade bubble my bum this year. ' The men who organize the 82-50.- 000 pre-game. show every Novem- ber sre unhappy because Winnipeg Blue Bombers have no yen for About the only thing Bombers will carry east to meet Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the Grey Cup clamic this week are a. float, in few satin beanie: and plenty of Winnipeg money. "It won't be anything like the parade: staged by other western clubs," a parade official said Mon- day. "The Blue Bombers are blase over it and it's too bad. Calgary Stampedera made the parade the most. colorful spectacle in Cana- dian nport in 1048 and it was kept up by Saskatchewan Roughriders and Edmonton Eskimos. But those Blue Bombers just don't go for the high-jinks." The Toronto Junior Board of Trade. whiqh runs the mow, fig- ured the Blue Bombers, who last travelled' east in 1950 in search of the Grey Cup, would come through this time after a disap- pointlng pre-game show three years ago. Donate About 32,000 Parade officials were optimistic of a good show until Alderman Jack St. John, a member of Win- nipeg's special sub-committee ap- pointed to plan parade participa- tion, said Saturday that the city probably would donate only about 32,000. "They cant do much with 8.2,- 000", said G. L. Crapper, secretary of the Junior Board of Trade. "That's very disappointing. The parade will lose plenty of color now." One parade organiser in Winni- peg summed it up this way: ”We just aren't a promotional city." ”He must be right,” said Crap- per. ”It was the same when the Blue Bombers camp out tlhrec years ago. Well, we can at least count on a. colorful show from the Tiger-Cats. They've been itching to get into something like this for many years." The pre-game antic: hit the spectacle stage five ymru ago when Stampeders made the trip east for the first time in the. club's 37- liger-Cals Gel Big Welcome Al Hamillon HAMILTON, (OP) - Hamilton Tiger-Cats, bruised and battered and now ready to carry tihls city's hopes into the Grey Cup football final for the first time since 1943, returned Monday from Montreal to A roaring welcome from 3.000 fa no. The crowd, led by Mayor Lloyd Jackson and memibers of the city council, jammed the Canadian Na- tional Railways statlon and spilled into the street to greet the Tiger- Catn on their homecoming after beating Montreal Alouettea Sunday. Coach Carl Voyles rested his team Monday but said he would hold four bclosccl workouts this week in preparation for the east- weat final against Winnipeg Blue Bombers in Toronto Saturday. The tvi-o-game scrim with Mont- real have left the Tiger-Cats with many aches and bruises but none is serious. Bob Cross returned with his right arm in I sllru but the former Chilcalgo Bear tackle will be ready to play Saturday. Maryland Voted No. 1 U. S. College Foolballlgam NEW Yoa.K., (AP)-Maryland. only undefewed and untied major college team in the United States, was voted the No. 1 football team of the land Monday in the weekly Associated Press poll. Coach Jim Tatum's terrific Ter- rapins moved into the top spot af- ter Iowa held Notre Dame to a 14-14 tie Saturday, with the result that the Irish dropped from the No. 1 place to No. 2 for the first time this season. Maryland, winner of 10 stvglght games and with one of the tight- est defences and best offences in the oountry, ended its season sat- urday by blanking Alabama. 21-0. Maryland is expected to be the Atlantic coast conference's repre- sentative in the Miami Orange Bowl Jan. 1 against Oklahoma. the Big seven hamplona. lilarll-cl-Iii In Decision Over Klil Portuguoz BROOKLYN. (AP)- Joey Giu- dsllo, third-ranking middleweight contender from Philadelphia, Mon- day night. won I unanimous 10- round decision over Tuao (Kid) Poi-tuguez of Costa Rica in a. rough foul-packed map at the lantern Parkway arena. Glardello weighed 160. Portuguea. lei. ' Each fighter was penalized I mund. Referee Ruby Goldateln we both mm for various in- fractions and Jack Friday. Portu- gueii trainer. was suspended for climbing onto the apron of the ring in the wild fourth round. Nsw cmiuialv -roaomo. ( )-D. a. Pen- nlngton of Pukhlu, Ont, wn elected chairman of the Canadian Produce Council for 1054. it. was u,eu'l.v u IOOBQ - announced Monday. He succeeds Grey, Cup Parade Reported Unhappy year history and defeated o . Rough Riders la-7. Hundi-9.1:”; gaillt-clad supporters, cowbny cowgirls, chuck-wuona mg mat J8-ck! descended on Toronto, p' That's when a Grey cup er was born-an era of screwy laba leaux and clowning um m ”l clualc apart from my owl,” Canadian sports event. ” But They Lou, The Stamps did the same I. in 1940 when they lost 35.15 E Montreal Aloucttes. In 1050 thu Blue Bombers came down mihou: much fanfare and lost 13-0 to 1-0 rronto Argonauts in the muck An(; mud. The parade color was 1- 1951 when Saakatchewanevlligg ll," riders came east. They 105:, 35.1; to Ottawa but act staid Tammm, fans on their ears with .. djapla. of 30-odid floats and bands. my Eskimos made the trip 1”; wag with oil derrlcks, wagons '3”: trucks. They lost 21-11 to A,.' nauts. SOC The Board of Trade 0 ,, of the work on the pua:l1e7s1;l:sl'L new llrms supply the floats 1; takes a staff of about 50 Board at Trade volunteers months to pot the the whole thing in sharp. The parade. which takes lab(VIl' an hour from the time it slam gt Wellington Street in dot.-n,,,.m oronto. winds up at Varsity SI-4. dium about noon. i The fun continues ll1.5ldP ti... stadlum until the 1 pm. kicktill, hliig Air Force Defeat Y3-37 The R. O. A. 1". basketball tam from Summer-aide defeated . Charlottetown Y. M. C. A. mum 52-37 last night in an exhibition basketball game at the Summer- side Air port. The Y lvcrc leadlllk 13-17 at half-time. ' Ron Atkinson was h - for the Y with 16 ggintawllilf lowed by L. Magculggm And C MaoDougiill with nine. Bell and Monford led the Air Force with 13 points. Hampshire Man Wins Novel Bmsiersionlesl Wendell Tr:-mere of HRllll7Slll1,. won the 325.00 prize on the Boost ers Program at the Islanders. Millionaires game last night by selecting the correct time of the first goal in the second period. The Boosters contest was in. augurated last night for the first time. Hockcy fans enter the can- teat by purchasing a program hurl fruesaing the time that they think the first goal in the second period will be scored. The fan having the crvrrect timi- or the nearest time to the grill scored collects the money. Lul night Tremere hit the time on the nose with his 1.53 as coach Bllckn Trainer triggered a shot past. Da- fcllce for the opening goal of the second period. Vicloria Cougars Coach Fined S100 SEATTLE. (AP) -2 Bill seas. coach of Victoria Cougars in the Western Hockey League, was fined 1100 Monday for pushing I refem League President Al Leader. ivlir. levied the fine, said Reay. fnrmrl Montreal Ciinadiens f or wa r d. pushed referee Ross Morrow 111 Sunday night's game with seziitle. The incident occurred ulwn Reay was protesting I mlscoiiiliict penalty given one of his pllllllls Pay 560000 For Irish Filly ARCADIA. Callf., (API - Pl”: chase of the two-year-old lrlsll nlly Sixpence by Alberta Ranrhes Ltd, was announced ll: 50”” Arilta track Monday. The price was repor 360.000. Jockey Johnny Longden. son Vance in a. partner in Rumbas. said the filly was from A.I.i. Hawkins, Irish llblli" man. who earlier had sold l'll9lll Thirteen of Dlunonids. Wl-rill” the Irish Derby two years can Both Sixpence and Tl'llI'll'('ll til Diamonds are expected hm ill” IE6. Rinks In HamlIion;Spiel (op) -SeventY'5li' the llnltctl IIOTI utd tn hr u h06C HAMILTON, rinks from Canada and states have entered I-laml liil bonsplel. I , Twenty - two rinks began Fl,-I Monday for four trophies-lzhevf, lance Memorial. South MW” "' 1-larstone and Thistle Club-am five remained undefeated end of the day's curllrill Flmils, comprised of 16 feated rinks and another ( failed only once, will he rill” Friday. Ell.-EEEI-'iAA(,'I. iuiaar VIENNA. (Reuters) -A of thocdmmunlst- council for Peace began ll! M, dam Delentaa included Dr -llim', lllndlcott of Toronto: Prof -ll Curie. Frame: Pietro Nenni. ll miwtllzc tad Work re W and Ilya lhrenburc, Bulw-