in Hockey Title; span. 29, 194s Plans will likely be formulated at toruahvs meeting for ti itles by n Leilon Quid this season. It has been no (CP)-Calgary Stampeders, M§,f,§f*;§,,°’,f§,§$“i,§€f,§“;fmm° masters of hockey razzle- lion and it is likely that they will be trying to emulate the success which attended the hockey squads activities as they captured a Mari. time lntenm to title in addition to being finalists in’ the race for m, City Iieggu: title..- will is no m oom mittee but it ls expected that after tonight's meeting a definite iist of the players will be available. , t vi- i- O ' Winnipeg Monarchs after twice being on the brink of elimination First Tine is Flvs lssrs Trophy lias Bselflloll By Westsrl fisalll no 111T JONES (Canadian Pram Staff Writer) , EDMONTON, April 28 — dazzle, are ‘Canada's senior amateur hockey kings for 1946, bringing the Allan Cup to the west for the first time in five years. The big westerners won the championship last night with an unspectacular _1-0 victory over a fighting Ham- ilton Tiger elub, a victory that came on a bounced-in goal in the second period but one that gave them the best- mviipih sot..."3,‘°..{§§{°“_‘” ch32; of-seven series four games to were over 16,000 of them. when- ong_ they whi St. Michael's Ool- lelze squad 4-2 to carry the Mean. oriil CllD back to Winnipeg. It was the third time that a Monarchb team haste-attired the Doanirlion championship. and in the series that is norw history the . esterners won their tltlethe way. 4- Q t It‘ Pitted againd’. a team just as great as they wer themselves Wizards of the flashing passing attack, Stamps show- ed their defensive mastery last night, too, after little Archie Wildefs shot through a maze of players bounced in off Tiger- defenceman Billy 5herry’s elbow at 9:43 M hs had the‘ extra e ,- soiiiorio night that finally ‘fit. in the second while Ham- ofl for them- Lieterflns to the llton was a man short. radio broadcast by Foster Hewitt one could a t visualise the titanic struggle that .was being waged and when Robertson came through with his first third per- iod goal one felt that it. was the csvvff. t O O O There were many thrilling mo- ments in the remaining lfl-odd minutes of play with‘ Gibson in the Monarchs’ nets coming through with a couple of sensational saves that rcpt his team's lead intact and then Robertson furnished the climax to his starry performance bv potting the rubber in minute of plav for the goal that meant firlis to any chances the ‘Toronto teem might have had of sending the game into overtime. O I- O e As Foster Hewitt pointed out it wssoneofthebestilfnotthebest Almost 6.000 fans who packed Edmonton's arena expecting spec- tacular hockey saw instead a tight. close game. After the Calgary score they saw Tigers go all out for the equalizer that never came, raining rubber at Calgary goalie Russ Detell who was a jumping. dlvi-ng, unbeatable acrobat, For a period and a half after the western goal, the luckless Tig- ers threw everything but their sticks at Calgary. Their shots bounced off the goslposts, were smothered in front of the net, or deflected by the defence wall of layers Stampeders drew up in ront of their net, determined to make their slim margin the win- ni-ng one. From there until it was over there was only the odd Calgary rush and thus Siam era, who clicked off victories n the first three games of the series by scores 3"?“ 5'3"“ W" “":;‘*- a‘: of 0-2. 0-} and‘ 4-3;) befogel Tigers t k the curt y a - score, m?‘ game‘ bane“ “wgdiumé rggched the successful end of their ‘My ‘m’ u ‘a “w” u" quest for the Allen Oup The cup 1"" h“ M“ 9d “d w" thus comes to the West for the mum‘ m“ m‘ wmmmg‘ w“ first time since Regina Rangers “m” ‘hmulh "l hm“ i M“ took it. In a serles with Sydney that Eastern squads had held on the trophy for the past several rmirs. And they won it on their merits from a great Junior hockey machine. Jfilllonalres in 1941. For the lucklelis Ti era-they lost ace scorer Dillon rady for most of the series when he was struck down by 'flu-it was the much ssdder end’ of s long hockey trail. For many of their veteran l Mealtime mo!“ 10°F "m! PNii- lll ers like Swat Mason and "kmm 55- ‘mim- "nmwn i“ Bolig Bunions. well past. or crowd- Amherst if the present 911M M’ lug so. it probably was their last Thom" 01 554993911" l" chance at the Allan Cup. . ‘morass who is s rs- ttlmed war veteran was Am- 5mm" llerst recently laying plans for s series of wrestling _ d stst- n"; pend ed that he hoped to form s chain 0i snort towns throughout the gagpmqqqonp, Marltisnes with the intention of hump-allergy, oromoting wrestling and boiilis Second Period mt several s week. rmhfilgéry, Wilder (Brown- ge : . Brooklyn Dodgers, currently blt- Penalties: Blobodlsn, Brlilling- illnlz for the National ill leld ton, Robertson, Mason. with the favored M. In cards 'l‘ rrl cried are placing the accent on youth. Scoring-None. Under Branch Mickey's leadership Penalties-None. srebeinsbro. HOW T-ilEY STMlll \ THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN l Stampeders Win 1-o ilai. Eiteliharlli "if whilg Mqnagvghg Agog ,At 1st Annual Topping “Irish” 4-2 Winnipeg Y-iliiii-[SIOFS Receive Great Ovation From‘ Record Crowd By ALLAN NICKLESON (Canadian Press Staff Writer) ‘ TORONTO, April, 28 —, (CP) — The comet-like Mon-i archs from Winnipeg won. the Memorial Cup and the: Canadian junior hockey; championship last night, de-i throning St. Michael's Col-j lege of Toronto with a 4-2 triumph to complete smashing upset in a thrill-l packed seven - game serles~ that set Dominion attend- ance records. Two sensational goals by a' truly great right winger, Georgie Robertson, provided; the third-period victory mar- gin that gave the west the coveted cup for the 15th time in 28 years of competition. _ fiivig; who“ Monarchs, 2-1 underdogs while breaking even in the first six games, received a tumultuous ovation from the record-breaking gathering of 15,803, in Maple Leaf Gar- dens The adds of 7-5 suliszs’ the Western Canada tirliiéts rc-r the final lame appr-ored justified when the colic-glans scclec th: all- "nvcrtant flr z goal- b"l‘l use the team to score first had gone. on to win eowh of tho pnvous games. Bu. Monaruis battled tc a l-l draw L! the en o. the first pcr- iod. and the teams finished the second tied 2-2 with Monarchs boasting a wide edge 1'1 the play. It was anyone’s game in tile third —unfil Georgie broke loose with as nice a pair of goals as seen here in yeors. The tumult when Robertson. destined for Toronto's National League Iieafs, scored the goal that proved the winner, increased when he shot the sizzling clincher and reached its peak as the b time clock touched the 60-minute. mark and rang the final hell. Streamers, programs, hats, torn paper-and even a half-pair of igose corsets with lacing-littered t e ice. Gibson Sensational Goalie Jackson. who made some all-but-imposslble stops in the last couple of minutes, and Robertson were mobbed by their teammates. and the lighter, gallant Irish. bit- ter oppmients since the series opened April 18, took off their padded gloves to shake hands and pat shoulders. The crowd set a new mark for a Junior hockey game in Canada. The previous record oi 15.659 was set in the some arena during s 1098 Memorial Cugsbsttle between 5t. Boniface and hswn Generals. Total gathering for the sevén- gsme series was 102.575. a record for n seven-game amateur series in Canada. l The goal that raised Monercns to the championship cams at a time when the Toronto colleglans were pressing. aopearlng likely to score. Robertson. who gathered 10 points during "he series, took the puck at centre. shifted the two- rnan Irish r-enrguard out of posi- tion, and fired u waist-high shot from IS-feet out and to the side. Goalie Pat Boehmo never touched it. Even the Winnipeg sports writers in the press ox jumped up and cheered. Six minor penalties. evenly div- ilded, were issued during the battle. l‘. characteristic of" the prelylolttlsl six n . fimmii“ “"393 ifwiiltl." '31‘: Mamba»: basil‘: ' 14"‘ 7°‘- checklng fiercely and scoring on 3 35° sheer driving er. although they 4- M8 did not have the finish and pol h “'- 4 M’! s! last season's p holders DUCK PIN LEAGUE 5 5W around the nets. As usual. "l! ' 5 M4 Reizsls had an edge in the play. ‘I Al’! The result climaxed an uphill 5 J53 fight for‘ Monarchs who scored ---------.3 l0 M‘! twee goals in orb’ of thenirist l‘! Oll n NATIONAL IIAQUI eaelleo turmoil fourfiméiueiy crest- . ' sd s indol- set by taking the We: Lost‘ P1011.‘ ssralesmtivpanegr-a -3, dlosst 7th»: second '. sn r -, won e ' Q -“ MUN-h l-S lost ‘trim flftll 4-7 llid '1 s .01 won ills sixth 4-2. rt was the rim O B. .565 triumph for Ooach Waller New ork ......_..... 5 s AM Henson. quiet-spoken former Ams- n ti a z a“! Mgr“ who plsyicd hin h‘ lord . . e sr s t e t or __ Qflldiltihlt -..-.-.l-._ I I IN I Zclirb.“ Monsrclhor" w: 5m Q5 Q1 I. . g 1% and . l unintentional-Mon , j lslsstsd Moose" Jaw h isglo: r. nooootu. ' " "l flu: t take ee‘ Douestte. Wench-i N- un =oaoasptoilgumiai ‘mi-i.- and is: mo. l: Wolvos l. g I g “any.” ‘w’: h, ‘m, ‘fonflht at 1:00: Gvrnohourlds I _ ' vs. W vss. , 5 4 l‘ H‘! : , s - ~t _ oosrs roo mun s i ‘ 3 "u IITRSAR. South a ~ ( Q t l _ 1:10: ears i: fir‘ ~ on s ' depots "of Dlnhn for the Gofl~ Royal was not savored by ‘Ii - - is i §a§'i'l"'i§o°°“""'v'i'n “Lilli u.“ ousting stroll m!) (M. i eseh. ‘ ”"""' a i imsnmsd iiuthTo iionfer With liead 0f Mexican Loop NEW YORK. Awil 2'1 - (AP) — Rain, the ferrnq- lsome run said Salish-day he to Mexico Oity May 8 to spend a of weeks there at the ln- vitation of Jorge Pasquei, president of the Mexican ‘L ll League but that all plans awaited a meet- Pssque 4 i PAGE SEVEN Ins with l's representative hell-e. I g on that he would confer with uel regard- iiooiley Banquet o...» t. Adios Sets New Mark Beating King’s Counsel ARDADIA, Calif, April E-(AP) —-Addios. 1965 champion pacer from the Shspiro-Wamer Btsble, Saturday defeated his arch-rival, King's Counsel, by s length and one-half in the seven-furlong, all-age pace feature at the Santa Anita grand circuit harness race meet. setting a new world record of 1.46 Lu the process. Adios led all the way to score his 31st win in the lengthy series be- tween the two famed nacers. King's Counsel, owned by Baker Acres of St. Charles, 111.. defeated Adios for the 33rd. time last Sat- Pep To Meet- Petrone May 6 NEW HAVEN, Conn, April 28- (APi-Willis Pepi d Hartford. Conn, who hods the world's featherweight title in New York, Connecticut and several affiliated states. and Ernie Petrone of Phil- adelphia, a lightweight. have been Budge Beats Riggs Easily noursvrms. Kit. api-ii (Arr-Challenger Don Buds stroked his way to In easy 6-0. I victory over Bobby Rig s, prefer slonal tennis champion, ere 8st- urday in the 30th match of their cross-country tour. Budge's victory cut Riggs’ mar- gin to 18 matches to 14. The chal- lenger hos won i8 of the last l'I matches. WONDER BEACON The first great light house, sl- most 400 feet high. stood on the urday. signed for a non-title 10-round island of Phsros. off the coast of _____i_ fight here May s. matchmaker Egypt, and was konwn as one The display of military insignia George Sheppard announced Sat- the seven wonders of the ancient started in medieval times. urday. world. need for makhig conscious. notional o! yslcal Fitness urged s Saburdatxw night gathering d th at first annual hodcey uét held by the local men of Plhysioel Fitness crate with slnd W.W. Reid, DBO ED provin- cial ddreotor, in Over 130 excited and happy boyg and girls, represcntiingwschools tine various parts of Province. were present at the en- ] ble function held at the Gila:- lo tOwn Hotel. Guests included provincial educational leaders, rep- resentatives of service clubs, and ohier citizens who did numb to aid win rogram of youth Reid was chair- trophies banquet. the pres- to winners of the Poe-Wee and Bantam hockey - plnnships on behalf qf JR. Williams and the Knotty Nizners Club re- n the tier p activity. LieuL-Col. man. Hockey filfllllplflllflla)‘ were presented 111112118 e Archer,‘ mum men- phy to the winning the le. Inerwholnstic Mr. Charlie ted a for lCity Interscholastic Dnoonrnghlg Progress I 1n a more. address, Llclrth-Ool Reid referred to the sprleridid pro- ‘glms made since last allby the Jlrysical Fihnem brunch of educa- tion. l-le said it was the intention ofhlsdc venlttocontlnue the wvsram lthalt followed dlurhig ‘months. He visualized a ‘track and field sports was llggfieful of ain lnverscholsstlc base- seriw. Major Ian Eisenherdt. speaker, Lloyd Show cunt of work accomplished by the local Physical Fitness Branch of ithe Department of Education since fits inception last Novemben | Mador Eisenhsrdt felt through an organized and supervised Ingram 0f a, that a heel y and happy peop resulted. In learning good sports- manship. the youth qf being irlsirucied in izauship wmorrow. Music (or the evening was pro- vided by Doln Meser and his lenders. .Texans Are ' Winners in Five ‘Events D18 MOENES, Iowa, April 28- \(AP)—-F'leet-footed stars from five Texas school! and a gloomy rain from the heavens took the play dnjseturday at the 37th annual Drake ys. Texans triumphed in three relay racer-the university quarter and half-mile events and the college mii*-and two individual events- the 100-ysrd dash and high hurd- Martlrleson, Baylor Univer- aco, Tex" won the century in finish with Lloyd Le- besch, the Jamaclan sprinter from the University of Wisconsin, and Allen Lawler. University of Texas. who finished in that order. La- beach got a poor start which prob- sbly prevented his becoming a double winner. He captured the broad jumlp Friday with a leap of 2i feet, l0 1-8 inches. Martinesorfs tlmcs was :09.9. s tenth of a second slower than La- beach‘s time in Friday's trials. it‘? C.C.M. STRONG FRONT HUB Built of hardened-steel with stout axle and accurately machined and hardened ball-races to give years of smooth and easy running. _ NOTROUBLEnowtogetTommytorr-ln messages — he's actually looking for chances to go places on his thrilling new C.C.M. Bicycle. So much so that he’: making real ’ money after school delivering — he's in business. This is but one of the advantages of owning an always-reliable, easy-running C.C.M. Bicycle. Both children and their parents must keep a keen eye open so; value when making a major purchase like a bicycle. Here again is where C.C.M. is "tops” for it is downright full value for your. . dollars. 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