NOVEMBER 27, 1950 THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN PAGE SEVEN:-I Toronto Wins Canadian Football Championship By JACK smrcsniu. . Toa.oNTO. Nov. M - (OP) - As giert opportunists as ever, Toronto A;-gonluts Saturday recaptured the Janadlln football championship and the Grey our hr I.h'P"'I '-I10" my to meet the conditions -- a morass of mud and water that rmked unong the worst gridiron: ,.-u- used for an East.-West final. Argos played for til! DPQIKS and may made their breaks as they 7.533 3:11: football provided few ex- citing moments for the wind-chill- ed aowd of 27.100 in enlarged Var- .,ny stadium - largest gathering "er to watch a Canadian football game -- but it was championship , gglibre under the circumstances. The slithery playing conditions .,,ougiit renewed demands. particu- imy from Winnipeg quarters. that me Canadian Rugby Union or the stadium invest in a tarpaulln to protect the annual Dominion final field from the elements. A number of United States col- wges use pre-game covers on their giiduons and are satisfied with re- guns. 3 recent Canadian Press sur- irv showed. However. officials of we C.R.U.. which stagu the -hamplonshlp playoffs. said at that Elma the risk of bad weather didn't iustify the expense of a tarpaulin, iylilch an American firm said I: gould provide for 33:01”. Hcw much a pre-game cover so-.ild have helped Saturday's field Lt problematlcal. with risine tem- Winnipeg Blue Bombers 28 I peratures turning Friday's eight inches of snow into rain that stop- ped shortly before the kickoff. only to start again with five minutes re- maining, it was a quagmire. Added to that were grooves and holes left by snow-removal machines. Underfootlng seemed more treach- erous than 1949. when the field was a patchwork of ice and snow-melt- ing-into-mud as Montreal Alou- ettes defeated Calgary stampeders -15. ' All-Weather Club While some Monday quarterbacks argued that the outcome might have been different on a dry field. others held that the Dominion title is an all-weather affair to be won by an all-weather club. The Argus left no doubt about their qualifications on that score as they steadily built up their lead - 1-0 in the first quar- ter. 1-0 at halftime and 13-0 in the third. All five Argo scores resulted from Winnipeg mlscues. After Joe Krol punted their opening point. Argos kept kicking to the Bombers - of- ten cn first or second down -- and let their opponents come to them. Normally a high-scoring. forward- passing team -- they piled up 369 points in 15 previous big four and playoff games - Arizos threw only three forwards all day. The strategy paid off quickly. In the second quarter. Jack Jacobs. WinniDelz's Indian Import quarter- If You Enjoy gz V 5:! 4:-. .-.. You'll E I a nloy if I JIM?! ”"(.'-C-M-5 THERE'S so)fl'rH1NG truly Canadian about skating . . . the crisp, clear air that whistles into your lungs like a refreshing shower . . . the shimmering ice, criss- crossed with sabre-scars from zipping blades . . . the rhythm . . . the absolute freedom of motion . . . the sheer enjoyment and exhilaration of it! back from Green Bay Packers. twice made fumbles in his own territory. Both times Argoa worked the ball in front. of the goalpcsts on run- ning plays and then Nick (sure- foot) Volpe came on to kick place- ments -. one for 21 yards and the other for 23. Volpe. 24-year-old University of Toronto product used mainly in a defensive backfield role. said later he had difficulty lifting the bail out of the mud but his trick of shav- ing down the front cloak of his kicking foot - to give it a "rocker" effect-paid off. The Argo wingllne. who out.oha.rg- ed their heavier opponents all day. made the break for the third-quar- ter touchdown. Three of them broke through on a Winnipeg punt. Mid- dle Jalre Dunlap, a one-time ot- tawa Ric-mil Rider. blocked Jaoobs' kick with his head and outside Bud Fowler chased it back 35 yards to the Winnipeg 20. Fun there, Toronto rolled along the ground in six plays to a touch- down. quarterback Al Dekdebrun finally crawling over the one-yard line. vclpe. who kicked 52 converts over the season. was wide on this one. Krol, the triple-threat hero of Ar- gona-..its' Grey Cup reign from 1946-47. kicked his second single moments later after-' Dekdebxun in- tercepted a Jacobs' forward. Now used mainly for his punting and in a defensive role. the 81-year-old product of Windsor's Kennedy Col- legiate made the entire Argo strat- egy pay off with his weu-placed punts. Krol also made a telling play in the second quarter when Argos led only l-0. Unable to kick because of a bad third-down snap, he raced nine yards for a first down that set. There's something truly Canadian about C.C.M. Matched Skating Sets, too Q . . . good enough to win world-wide acclaim . . . popular enough at home and A abroad to be preferred by the majority of hockey players, figure skaters, speed skaters and pleasure skaters who enjoy skating more when they skate on C.C.M.la. Hockey players have another C.C.M. favourite too . . . the tough, durable. ey Stick found in the hands of top perfectly-balanced.C.C.M. Laminated Hock lcoterl in any league. More than 3,000 . friendly C.C.M. Dealers throughout Canada 99 serve you. THE BIKE SIIOP 188 GT. GEO. ST. - GHTOWN -- PHONE 941 R. T. . QUEEN sr. ll0l.MAil LTD. SUMMERSIDE - CHARLOTTETOWN The Rogers Hardware co. Ltd. CHTOWN Brace. Mcllay & co., Limited DIITIIIUTOIS C.C.M. SIATIS. HOCKEY l'l'lClS.n.nd III . SPOITING SUPPLIES. SUMMEBSIDE CLARK BROS. IIONTAGUE - PHONE 85 PHONE 105 Texas Western 48, West Virginia 7. nwsshingion 52. Washington State ifornia 0. State 7 (I TORONTO. Nov. as - (CP) - With Tod Sloan their trigger man. Toronto Maple Leafs downed Montreal Canadiens 4-1 before 14.- 201 fans Saturday night to run iheir current National Hockey League victory string to three in four days. Sloan fired two goals and one lsslsl. duiplicaiing his scoring per- formance of Wednesday night when the League leaders started iheirihree-game string. He shared siarringg honoiswiih rookie goalie Al Rollins who was in the neis in all three games and is the League's only unbeaten goalie. Leafs have won five and lied one of the six games in which the lanky rookie has supplanted veteran Turk Broda in the Toronto nets. It was a rough. hard-hitting bai- ile-lypical of the way the two Canadian rivals go at each other almost every time they meet. Each team drew eight minor penalties, six resulting from minor scraps. They battled on almost even terms through a goal-less first pe- riod. Cal Gardner put Leafs in front early in the second but be- fore ii was over Canadians re- plied with a counter by Vern Kaiser during a slashing penalty ...m.Lm..LEL....j. up Volpe'a first placement. instead of losing Argos the ball. waited for Bombera Coach Frank Clair said later the Argo strategy was based on scoring the first point, then letting the Bombers come in them. "On a. day like this. the odds are in favor of a team fumbling if it handles the hall often enough. particularly if it his the psychological hazard of playing in its own territory." Bombers might have upset the stnatxy if they had a backfielder with the daring of Friizie Hanson, the galloping ghost who brought the West its first championship on a similar day in 1936 by catching kicks on the fly and racing them back for long gains and an 18-12 victory over Hamilton. Instead. the Bcmber backs usually waited for the slippery ball to stop rolling. The Argo win cllmaxed a. remark- able season for Clair. 34-year-old former Buffalo University coach who hadn't even seen as Canadian football gs.me until he took over this season from Tedder Morris. The little suburban Melton farmer, whose teams finished out of the playoffs in the last two seasons af- ter their three successive Grey Cups. watched from a seat on the 50-yard line. Argonaut teams now have won the Canadian title nine times - eight of them since east-west play started in 1921. They hold seven of the Victories over Winnipeg. who has yet. to beat them. In all. the east has won 20 of the 24 arinum classics. Besides the 1935 triumph over Hamilton. Winnipeg won twice over Ottawa in 1989 and '41 and Calgary beat Ottawa in '4? Leafs And Red Wings Saturdayls NHL Winners 4' to Toronto's Gus Morison. Maurice Richard. who played an aggressive game for the losers. was sitting out a penalty when Sloan cut loose for his two goals. 05 seconds apart. early in the third period. The first was a spec- tacular play. Sloan took a pass from Max Bentley at his own blue- line. started toward his own goal. ihen turned and streaked down the ice all alone. He went by all four backhand shot past Gerry Mc- Neil. The right winger capped his night's work by helping Johnny MoCormack score late in the game. Richard was mixed up in two of the roughing sessions, once with Fleming Mackell and again with Mortson. Ray Timgren and Elmer Lach were principals in the other boui. ' Rollins had 30 Montreal shols to handle while Leafs drove 25 at McNeil, who also came up with some breath-taking stops. Canadiens lost Ken Mosdell in the second period when he ag- gravated an old knee injury. Ylrat Period Scoring: None. Penalties: Morison. Kaiser. Harvey. Second Period 1-Toronto. Qardner (W a is o n. Klukay) 5:43. 2-Montreal, Kaiser (MBCPIICTSOH. Harvey) 9:38. Penalties: Klukay. Morison, Macxay. Richard, Mackell. Third Period 3-Toronto. Sloan (Bentley) 5:08. 4-Toronto. Sloan (Kennedy. Smith) 6:13. 5-Toronto. McCormack (Sloan. Smith) 15:18. Penalties: Timgren. Lach (2). Richard: (2) Morison, Barilko, Sloan. Montreal defenders and slid a- NEW YORK I. BOSTON I BOSTON. Nov. 26 -(-AP) -Milt achrnidtfs goal pulled Boston 4 Bruins into a 3-3 tie with New York Rangers as these lowly Nat- ional Hockey League rivals battled Saturday night before a skimpy 7.- 15 crowd at the Boston Garden. After the first Boston counter. the game was halted for 14 minutes when Chuck Rayner. New York goalie. needed treatment for a deep gash over his right eye. ngyner was struck by Johnny Pelrson's stick as Vic Ly-nn tallied while four Bruins were milling about the New York net during the third minute of lJ'-lY- Rayner! wound required five stitches SUMMAIIY First Period 1-Boston. Lynn (Rpniy. Lowe) .. 2:42 2-New York, Mickoski 4:15 3-New York, Lund (Sinclair) -.. . 4:57, 4-New York. O'Connor i (Lund) . . .. 16:34 Penalties - lisinicki (major), Leswick. Kyle. Lancien. - Second Period 5-Boston. Ezinlckl (Schmidt) .. 15:03- Penaliles - Egan, Kraftcher-k. Third Period 6-Boston. Schmidt (Dumart) . . . (17 Penalties -- Kullman, Ezinlclu. DETROIT 4, CHICAGO 1 ! l')E'I'ROIT. Nov. 25 -tsp) -1 Detroit Red Wings poured in three goals within 11 minutes in the final period to whip Chicano Black Hawks 4-1 below 10.393 National Hockey League fans Sat- urday night. The Wings failed to show much in the first two periods but came to life to gain their third straight decision this season over Chicago. Bad ice. bugaboo of the Chicago- Detroit meetings ihis season. 113- ured in the game, too. Water. which Red Wing officials said had iiociiisv ourrirs iiociiisv OUTFITS THIS IS HOCKEY-OUTFIT WEEK AT LEPAGIPS. SHOE STORE SPECIAL PRICESON ALL SKATING OUTFITS GET YOUR CHRISTMAS GIllTS AT SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES BUY NOW SAVE 8 8 8 LePage Shoe Co. Ltd. "THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES" leaked in frcan the snow-covered P953”! - 1-lmdy. roof of Olympia stadium. made Second Period eight big patches of poor ice. 2-Chlclla. I-Undy Their first meeting at Chicago i30dnIr) . . .. 10:2! was postponed becausg unseason- Penalties - Howe. Fogolln. ally warm weather made it im- Third Period impossible to make ice. Their next 3-Detroit. Gee date at Detroit was played on (Couture, G. Stewart) .. Gzlle slushy ice. 4-Detroit, Pavelich 15:01 SUMMARY 5-Detroit. Lindsay Flrat Period (Abel) ..... .. . 17 El 1-Detroit. Macradden (Prysta i. Peters) .1 :35 vost. Dickens. Penaliiee- J. Con'scher.”Pron.o- u.s. college A Football Scores 53lUFd3.V's U. S. College foot- ball scores: EAST 'Fordham 13. New York Univer. sity 0. George Washington 7, Geo;-gg. town 8. Yale 14. Harvard 6. HULV Cross 26. Temple 21. Cornell 13. Pennsylvania 3, Penn State vs. Pittsburgh (pm1. ponecl snow-play Monday), Princeton 13. Dartmouth 7, CRIB” V-E -Rulkers (cancelled. rain and high winds). MIDWEST Northweelem 14. Illinois 1 Michigan 9. Ohio State 3. Wisconsin 14. Minnesota a, toklahoma A 8: M 41. Kim”. ate 0. Miami (Ohio). 28. Cincinnati 0, Oklahoma 49. Nelly:-gdlu 35, Purdue 13. Indiana 0. SOUTH Alabama 41. Florida 13. Georgia Tech 46. Davidson 14. Duke 7. North Carolina 0. William at Mary 34. North Caro- lina Stale O. 1 Wake Forest 14. South Carolina Tennessee 7. Kentucky 0. Clemson 41. Ashburn 0. Florida Slate 35, Tampa 19, Tulane 35. Vanderbilt fl. Georgia 4-0. Fui-man O. SOUTHWEST Texu Christian M. Rice 14. Baylor 3. Southern Methodist 0. Texas Tech 37. New Mexico 12. Arizona 27. Iowa State 28. S FAR. WEST Colorado 31. Colorado A 8: M 9. California 7. Stanford 7 (tie). Oregon Stale 14, Oregon 2. Brigham Young 28. Fort Hood (Texas) 14. U. C. L. A. 39, southern Cal- of Pacific 7. San Jose iel. College IIJNIMENI M THERPS A PLACE FOR YOUNG MEN -WITH GRADE 8 EDUCATION (or better) -BETWEEN l7 and 30 YEARS. OF AGE IN THE EXPANDING Permanent employment Good rates of pay 30 days annual leave with pay Pension or gratuity at and of service Marriage allowance, when on married strength Medical and dental care Opportunities for advancement A fine training that will always be valuable If You can consul MAIL THIS (0 See the CAREER COUNSEIIOR 9 him with complete confidence and without obligation r UPON TODAY-b 0 OUR PART TO HELP CANADA D0 HER PART FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF WHAT A FINE OPPORTUNITY THERE IS FOR YOU IN THE R. C.A. F. aaciwrrmo omcaa. a.c.a1. s'l'A'l'l0fl sumrsaeios.r.eJ. i-no-is: SUMMEISIDI em. LOCAL 74 Pluu until an, without obligation, jallpartiulivrx regtrding enlistment requirement: and opening: new cvieilabla I11 I50 R.CA.F. NAME ('PleasePi-int) STREET ADDRESS ................. .. CITY....................-............. PIlOVINCE.a......--... EDUCATION (by grade and province) ................ AGII can -..-.....--....-...........----..-.--.-.--u-- i I J ------4---------------.------ -..;.-.5-: ::;-v'..-L-.-f-n-v-- i