¥ 8, The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tees., Nov. 1, 1966 x ~~ oh SPORT ECHOES _ Snappy Play In: i ~ School Circuit - By NORMAN MacDONALD . i 2 ¥ I whew if slave RERSERGE Hl nfl i ikl gf ‘ = ; z | ful f i | | He i it ie af ite : it Li ae ¢ “ing the first half of the Chie” ae = Bt. Louis game. oe ‘artenbach: And. Tremblay Back _ By JERRY GLADMAN Publicity Is Sorathing. ot Orr Doesn { eee aay _ a | 7m 7 H | Want © them. cut sf livision. LESS NIGHTS for # month with torn -left ‘I guess theré Will be a lot of ligaments, has less nights for me if I don’t will join New York Rangers in Alive up,”: he says. “I’m going to try myhardest, but al I ean ry bud di supe “ = have been widen for to lead the league’s lower. “Re Dor ae aaa 1,000 Mark To Win Crown By THE CANADIAN PRESS | due to injuries, was third with 16 returns. Jim 649 yards in 144 attempts, slso Toronto was second wi oss | yards on 17 runbacks. Co-, finished Association Junior A series when he set records asa high- ae Ex-Referee Preparing Big By BOB MacKENZIE ‘OTTAWA (CP)—When Ray = Boucher took off his striped jersey for the last time last year -he knew he'd have trouble trying to watch .a foot- ‘ball game -without - uncon- sciously reaching for a ‘whistle or a flag. : “Tm still refereeing every. game I watch,”’ says the 48- year-old: RCAF veteran who x on .five other occasions that year to make ag total of $12 for his first season. He con- tinued to. referee amateur football | for the next several years—“handling every- thing from -peewees to colk- leges’”’—and finally broke into ee with the Big Four 954. He worked in 10 games his ‘year, quickly establish- himself with the league going on to work in eight Cup. games during his career. He was senior for two Grey yh Ss. oo te “ dit- of opinion with Semen ook writers du -Fing that span, but says he has no regrets. {I was nondescript ath- eo en sn, Hy fact that i. featured 1n the idl aes Goes bike Gi the last five on ‘the Grey Cup final—a “$200 plus expenses. For régu- “really out of line with the Mile World course and el Centennial Sport Program feels Canadian officials are*| row of HamiltomJTiger-Cats as the “greatest team_captain I ever met—a man who con- ~ trols his players.” : Controlling . players, — Bou cher added, is a big problem. in refereeing and the only way to do it is to crack down As an example, is iil game that..grosses close to. $800,000: with the referee getting only lar games, Canadian Football officials League atepaid on a | from. the apening whistle. : , Sliding scale, starting at $125 “If you don’t call the first - < for the referee and dipping to | roughing or piling-on penalty, a minimum of} $90“for the | how can you call the second, others. - or the third?” =f It was rough play that Gi NEEDED Ske “ the pay” isnt: | Made him decide to get out. of the game, but enough the incident occurred last year in~a junior game— not in the pro ranks. “On the first play th U.S. ‘pro leagues, “but it just f can't be a full-time job.” - “Refereeing football has. to remain a hobby.” game one boy kicked_atiother Sees wy aye en. in the face . . . and by the - perience was in high school | time the game ended I I had where he = an offensive | thrown 12 players—six from centre—snap in those days— and linebacker. He stil] has a- foneiness > for linemen in the He’ singled, out John Bar- each team—out of the game “After the game I said to myself World Golf ee elficiais predict ts Sect the” er will be~“won or ae 13, ast-yard ‘par 4, (24 cuts twice across the c Z , Manic f The Pharmacy = of aang < Dick 1 Sy M2 Prince St. Phone 43424 fen ct pAthat | —— REFULLY | We Love Our 76,000 Readers’. ; see vio of Clevel ‘Peers THE GUARDIAN. PATRIOT | Jackson _was ‘topS.;in passing, completing 142 of 276 passes for 2,400 yards. and a. .514 percent- + age. He ‘also a a touch- ee ee Bad tog Deslte‘ Toronto's ‘tee kee a rookie Wally Gabler ee ee second place. | Carl 99 of 219 passes for a 2 42 percentage. Joe Zu- ger. of Hamilton was 70 for 159 and a .440 percentage. 4. Joe Poirier picked off Last-place ‘Cah; eooneute had the top receiver _in Bobby — ing with 746 yards on 167 car- | 22 ries for a 45 average. Pare- ‘more, who missed two gemes" MA ME passes for the lead in thet eee (eee semen RACING , sa cine ‘oronto was se was led by BO Scott Ottawa | 98 eee Bowl Names Under’ Wraps! lorry ‘AP)—If new US. National Coy’ : (CP). — Eight horses, i uiding five from Prince Edward stables, shared’ the/ winner’s circle on an eight-dash harness |- cveles cond Seas Soar Sear Ozark Pete, owned and i Wid Shel a Cobriotiotoee: came. back from a fourth-place \finish\in the fourth heat to cross, aa sy wonnee Se rece: oe fli m League ime p before -he on — culty in getting our f ac- cepted,” —_ said//“But I think it will beat least two ier. | weeks before we have’ definite word. “It’s. our ffitention to” try to liberalize reinstatement proced- ures in afl cases and Brewer’s case is;not-a personal deal,”* ing that ormula, if accept- able, will.apply for all: profes- amateur club. : the /- club Western | ¥ . Nationals, We don't-anticipste any/éite , sionals seeking te rejoin an | Rm 8 Fi rheed si] il sa HT i 7? fe 2 E F ia- Cer. Grafton and Pownal Sis. Talk to. The Bank of Nova Scotia about the new Canada Savings Bonds Centennial Series, and about your personal holdings of past issues. We can advise you of thé _ best way to double your money with the new Canada Savings Bonds. . On sale now at every branch, * operetta