A liiclv bit if hockey action. ,,,....- IlIllSIl'8I8S a moment in the ,,,,,i,;n moi-time Same between iuniiiicrslile Ace: and Montague i.,,m,....-s in Sutnmerside on'Frl- R, min as the Aces. edged the gslerfl ir-sm by the score of 8-1. Hflfl .lIai'Arthur, one of summer ing-charge of the puck. while Th.” Mum who ha, been doing side net. but is intercepted from nebnunding for the team mate Dick Carroll by two Aces. is alert for any shots that Aces. Clow'. sensational might come in his direction. On the left. Apps Arsenault (No. SUMMERSIDE side's top defence men. is see it 9) stopping a Montague rush by tak- in Bailtiirsl Edges Daliousie 3-2 BATHURST. N3. (CPI-Play” lng coach Lou Kiley led Bathurst Papennakers into a second place tie with Dalhousle F I by scoring once and assisting another as Papermakers toppled R8939?! 3-2 Saturday. The teams are only one game behind the leading Campbsllton Tigers. Bob Reid made it 2-0 for Bath- urst in the first period after Kiley opened the scoring. Dalhousiels Clem Tremhlay shot the only tally of the middle frame. Kiley helped Maurice Lamirande for the last Balhurst goal and playing coach Ray Leduc ended the scoring. Beavers Down Services 7-3 SAINT JOHN. N.B. (CPl..5aInt John Beavers, dumping " cton Joint Services 73 Saturday night. strengthened their third position in the Southern New Brunswick Sen- ior Hockey League and emerged only two points below third place Fredericton Caplais. Beavers. again paced by the line of Nick Nicolle, Mal Barry and Jack Hamilton, won a first period 3-0 margin, withstood a Moncton comeback in the second and divided a pair of last period tallies as is strengthened Services club showed some of its best form of the season. of th eltiontague team moves to position beside the Summe - Gordon Cutcliffe and Leroy Photo By Wettu Bi JACK SULLIVAN raniidiaii Press Staff Wrlltf llFl.llOURNII icri-Australia mi the United States shared WP sriilallv honors in the 0lymPl9l- iii there were indication! illll aiiada may 50 mmllnl In” E pfuilllnenl place as a competitor lor international swimminl hon- .f!. it has been more than a t'fIIl"91' A century since a Canadian 0., an Olympic medal for swim- mfg: Hodgsori of Montreal car- ad off three gold medals in 1912 g a Canadian won a swimtnllll 'tl . ce.nsds's first medal in divhtl. iii min . l 'iiTdgsoEi's victories in the too. 19.... Ma 1,500-metre freestyle were strictly a one-man show. as the ans bronze and two silver ienls by MontreaI'I George Ger-1 t in 1920. This yar the whole was letting lnta uie net. i IN FINAL! Canada sent six swimmers and; o divers to Melbourne. of whom ix reached the finals of one event r more. The baby of the helm. I5-year-old Sara Barber of Brant- ynrd. Ont, triads it three times. wimming six races in four days. Hill Slater, Just one year nldti an Sara. swam the fastest ill-i rtre freestyle race of his life and; just missed qualifying for the fl-i wands off his previous best to finish a fastclosing fifth in ,the l.500-metre final. The Vancouver! youngster has swurn cenineti-i Ial. then knocked more than GA iivly for only two years. l Nineteen-ynsr-old Virginia Gran' Toronto twice broke the olu CURLINO i...a......... AT CIIARLOTTETOWN Continuing 3rd round of the fiirlicn llnnspiel. 7 pm. Section C. ice I - D. Saunders vs. W.R. ar.VriiI ire 2 -- Dr W. MacDonald VI. iliicl)onald. liel eboug Cameron vs. Dr. HIICIIIIIS. I-'0 p.m. Section D - I ire l - Doug Hill vs, II. At-, YIWII LW2 - l)r. L. Prowsa vs. J.l iiarrbriggs l 1-H -- .l.S. MacDonald vs. !'.. nnwi i funtinuiiis 1nd round palatal Mlvtiilinn on ice 8 U5 in o. O'Rourke - 0. "W3 -- G. Bennett. iCANADA MOVES up U.S. and Aussies Share Olympic Acquaiic Honors Olympic record in the 100-metre freestyle and finished Illlh in a final in which Australia's Dawn Fraser was clocked record time. The Canadian team an of Vancouver fifth in in final that saw a world Ian foursome. A schedule that scnt Miss Bar-I her into the pool twice within 25 ' t hamitred her perform- nieire backstroke in one minute, 14.3 sr-riiiids. faster than she had in world- ever ciivererl the distance in Can- ada. Tlicn. competing against s or Miss fresh field. slip was last in the 100- Barber. Miss Grant, liclen Stew- mel" , g and Giady, matched hcr qualifying time of Priestley of Verdun. Que., all of 116-2. she would hjvg beaten two them in their teens. also were 9' her "'”ll-I 3'"! Ilnlmed Imb- recond fail to the winning Aiistral-lye”-'3 niympic, indium nut . competitor is a has-been before he gets far into his 20s and it is un- likely that too many of this year's Canadian lineup will he in Roma anea in her fllnllning two finals. in mo Remember When A record for penalties was es- tablished in the National Hock y League three years ago last night with a total of 204 minutes as Toronto Maple Leafs beat Mont- real Canadicns ZH) at Toronto. Canadiens had we minutes includ- ing eight mist-onducts. Tortintai 98 minutes including seven mis- conducts. The game ended with only eight men on the ice. in- ciudlng goalies, and bcnrhes cleared by a mass misconduct penalty. ..m:tm..L......h.. ITALY CLOSES DOOR ROME 4APl-ltaly slapped So- viet Russia's diplomatic face Fri- day by barring Mikhail Suslov, powerful secretary of the Russian Communist party's central com- Siic fini-lied seventh in the 100- iiiittr-rfly. If she had A DREAM IS AT AN END Monday. Dec. 10. 1956 The Guardian Page 11 Olympic Athletes Back To Reality gMaLaoi.'n.x'i-;” (Cpl - om... .picvathletesgaud officials from 57 l nations continue dsunday the rush. lfrom Australia back to a world of shocking reality which has its eyes tot-used on Sue: and Hun-i am. not suunmins and hurdling.l For them a dream is at an , rowing and wt-igiitlifting. ian Yswimming team free-style events and thoroughly dampened American hopes. raine Crapp and Murray Rose were standouts for Australia"; , end-i swimmers. ' Their time cunsuiniiig efforts. The bloiiil. I7-year-old Rose em-I which Produred ll world recordsierized as one n! the individual Ind 31 Olympic records in the stars of the games with his triple- IIOSI Of Olympic 5Drirts will be all medal poriorma c H h ed but forgotten until sportsmen and honors with Bobby -filo;-:)uE at?-lsll EDeC((8)ll(;f;;pgi:lIlGl3;'maElS.RUlnE for the algieriting at... yiadiiriir Kuts, they 1950 l ateaiile Russian who be Melbourne's Olyinpir flame died. 93""? I-Ll? "7-3l0P9k" Of llle I955: Saturday on the biggest and most. Slime-K and l7 - rear - old Betty controversial of all (Hy mp , 9, Cuthbert. Aiisti'alia'a (lying whiz, Games. soon after Russia had 0" Ill! "Wk- won the final gold medal in the . last event of the gaiiic-. deft-at--. z'wo'000 SAW GAMES lug lYugoslavia l-0 in file .s(lt'Cer lhR”g9 13"” -'lll55h Cl;.1hb9Tl Wei! inn. 6 x'll'lfll.!S o t e ome crowd. Kills re:-cit-ed plaudits for win- Russia won the un if -'I t l . with 722 pm-ms to gl9..,l”,':”, fh: niiig hoilt the solo and 10.000- Unned Slates, Canada Wanna mctre runs, but Il5VdIdD'IHII13IIIpl two gold medalsg nmshm "I 16”! I0IfItlllIlt'r'fle the. triple of Czech- Place with 52 points Tlii- Enid osmatlahs hm” zmopehd Mm medals were won by the l'niver- W0" 0! me" "cu w my marathon in l952- About 2,000,000 persons, the largest number in games history, paid to see contests at various vcnues, with more than 1.000.000. Cramniuin into the spacious Mel-I hoiirne Cricket Ground for seven days of track and field. soccer and the ripening and closing cera- ITIOIIICS. Beautiful. tree-lined Melbourne, a normally conservative city of l.500.00fl people. threw its full; weight behind the project and ab? sorhed the influx of some 5.00 athletes and thousands of addi- tional overseas visitors without missing a breath. The vnvames opened on a joyous note. hn could forget the nth- USE FLESH FOR .'llEf)l(il.N'E letes happily marching into the ,vast Melbourne Cricket Grounds (REHgEgNEU?S&lv:0:1lehmbx:I231beiiirrd the banners of their court. the Bakathland tribe Fridav were: '"'5' BL” 3”” wh.” "I'M '”'"' "mused of murdering an -elderlwihe gallant Hungarian water polo man and stripping the flcsh non3'”"."' '5 " Slmd "'1 9” '”"”'Y his body to make "medicine" for mm. 0" ll". "9. "L the game?” 8 ml-NI "doctor... The 12' dghwclostng. singing with tears in theiri men and four women. appearedle:Ve”' "Mr P” ,' C'""""""5t "9' before a magistrate at a prelim- t""”'.l,,,"'”'9m 'G9d 5'" Him lnary hearing on the murder 8”” 0'1"” HUNGARY FIFTH "'rm"rmm'r1mm'--m Hunger)": fine fifth-place show- wogu) gun; in in the over-all unofficial team aity of British Columbia fours without coxswain. in rriwini: and by Gerry Ouellette of Wiiitlsur, Out. in shooting l COLLECT 31 Mi-:iisi.s l The Russians CfllI0t'If'(I :t7 ziilii medals. ll of them in monk and women's gymnastics and six in wrestling. They added 29 silver medals and 33 bronze for an nvcr-l all total of 99, compared with 74 for the United States. The United States rapiiircri 32L gold medals, 25 silver and 17 bronze, scoring 15 Chamfllfinshlps front 24 events in men's track and field and victories in basketball, Swimming performances in this mittee. from attending the party congress of the Italian Reds. A foreign office spokesman here con-' firmed the cancellation of Sus- lov's visa. a step he said was taken in the interest of "public . order." OHRISTMAS Annapolis Valley Apples. hamper 3.75 5Ib.bag 49c Sunkist Oranges. dos. . 39: Mixed Nuts. lb. 49: Peanuts, 2 lb. . . 75c CANDY Bulk CIIOCOLATES .. . lb. 59c AT ' OOMMIINITY MARKET NORTH RUSTICO DECEMBER I0 to I5 SPEGIALSL at , PERFECTION AND CARNATION MILK 6 Tins 79: WHITE OB YELLOW SUGA IOLIis.85c SATIN MLY . . . . . lb. 391'. rrrricn DATES. 2 lbs. .. .. PURITY ROBIN HOOD wamurs. V2 lb. .. .. .. CAKE MIX.plig. ANGEL CAKE MIX. pltg. . BULK SULTANA RAISINS. 2 lbs. . . . . . . . . . 39: srznnszn RAISINS. 2 lbs. . . . . . . . . . 49c 27c .43 0 21: SHORTENING. 2 pltgs. .. 49: ; Y0ltl(--20 on ' 35: PORK 1. starts. 2 for ... 35: l0OIb.bcig . . 25 lb. bag . . it-lice sin. suiiim. ll. Pet- F. Vnouo. D. Hum VI M. in Geo uaonauis. a. FIVE ROSES FLOUR SPECIAL PEKOE TEA lb. 79:; 6.29 1.69 woonnvnrs soars 3 Callas (both size) . . aunuom Twin Celtes aasonmo-zo oz TINS NlCIS.2 for LIGHT Mann NYLON5. reg. 1.00 . . diiimpociaiswiiisuuoau CONN! OI: I89-IO lb. guuyqfl p.lI. on list SPECIAL PRICES ON TUIIIIEYS. GEESE. DUCKS AND CIIICKIINB-PLACE ORDER NOW! l5'lo DISCOUNT ON ALL RIIHIR OOODS IN STOCK 1096 DISCOUNT ON ALL PAINTS IN STOCK. ...35c ...25e 35: ...79e Selapvegesses.Aslrforfi-ea Geese: Ind-Hassper of Apples given dayef sde. ' -point totals was completely over- Fifty - eight nations ntiw arelshadowed by the future departure members of the World Bank, set I of most of its team for their war- up by the United Nations withlravsgcd homeland. 28 member nations in 1945. Of the original 176 l-lunizariansl Free gum from clothes drying problems ... (3?,ti', as - -lint; MglJeln'aeireIaslveIl'fIAfOI isinuisleweesiasnaoaaafl Iecains of the Pltmor (down shove partly pulled Dill. thnFl'llldIire Isnpnsial Di-yerianich-onecenonsiialtoonerata hncainsoflios-neheisatnasoflsaat.Alse eauls-tnismllbseanssnev-tisger plinnhhawssnrv Lor- ; ivrho arrived in Melbourne about 0 I y m pic officials A superbly conditioned Austral-3 swept thel three weeks ago. 46 decided to re- r main in Australia. The others. who flew on to Milan. must make their fateful decision: hours. I a The Hungarians were so dis-, tressed Saturday night that nonei of them turned up when their flag? was lowered during the ceremonyl at the Olympic Village which isl carried out as each nation leaves. The athletes, taken in the air- port by bus, looked back sadly at those waving them goodbye while a bagpipcr played "Will Ye No Come Back Again." At the airport, strangers turned away, deeply moved. as the young Hungarians. men and women, said goodbye. Tears ran down their tanned faces as they embraced and exchanged farewell messages. FEW SMILED A few of the Hungarians forced wan smiles when the time ar- rived for them iii boani the plane. But many were sobbing. An airport official said: ”Never before have I seen such an un- happy departure. I hated to watch it." Hlliiizarian tttiilct.-:5 said they were staying in Aus-J tralia int-luiled Laszlo Tabori. one; of the world's great four-minute' milers, and gymnastic queen Ag- nes Kelcti, medals in the games. Swimmer Valeria She iii” in to Toronto marry her fiance who fled Hungary. STRUGGLE IN POOL l'lUnKBr.i"s bloody revolutionary struggle against the Russians was transplanted from the streets of Blldaliest to the waters of the mtllestic Olympic swimming pool. Fists. heads and tempers flew and flared last Thursday as Hun- gary's championship bound water poloists whipped the Russians 4-0. A Hungarian was taken from the pool with a bloodied resulting from a Russian butting. The game was cut short to avoid any further incidents and police es- corted the Russians from the pool. The political tensiona were ob- vlous from the outset. The Hun- garians retused to fly the Com- munist flag forced on them by a puppet regime. The Chinese Corn- munists pulled out rather than play side by side with the Na- tionalist Chinese. Then the Na- tionalists got miffed because p-to atttend the games rather tha it within compete against British or Israeli who had DOMINION mistakenlyiwcre cased partially within tho aised the Communist flag. pleasant coniincs oi Olympic Vii Several Arab countries refused lagc the efficiently mciit where all competitors lived. including the Russians, who. four years ago. niaintaiiied a shrouded Recrecy about their at-tivitioa lhlales. The friction: and di-cunt:-at ('3-I TIE new siiiiiiiiioii W" ,, s sisal" I" M09 ""' The lnest fire you can buy to meet every possible mud or snow condition. 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