Thur. March 27, 1958 The Guardian Page 7 Roya s efeai Northside 6-2 To Take Series Lead The Ready (Carroll) 6:48; 2-—Royals. J. Ready (Carroll, Pineau) 6:55: 3-—Royals, Whitlock (A. Carver) 10.35; 4—Combines, Maccarron (MacLennan, Andrea) 16.29. Pen- alties: Josey 4:26, 19:52. Second period: 5——RoyaIs, A- Charlottetown ‘ Royals‘ firing three unanswered goals. defence —— G. Thompson, B. Mac-‘fence — R. Josey, S. MacLure,_‘ Carver (Whitlock. Carve” captured thefxrst same or a Allie Carver got the first goal Leod, D. Morrison, F. lVlacPher- A. MacLeod A. Perry‘ forward3}5'°13 5—R°Y315v W‘““°°“ ‘S’ best-of-seven series with the ’ ’ after only five minutes of play when his shot taken from in ‘C a r v e r, MacLeod) 9:58; 7*‘ 5°“? "°’W“‘”°‘5 “ A‘ G°““”°’ D‘ — Pr W“i”°“kv A- Carve‘, 5- Royals, Perry (Whitlock) 15:05. Northside Combines by defeab MacFadyen, B. Andrea, T. Mac-iCa1‘V€r. A. Carroll. J. Ready. M- ing the Cape Brew“ team 5‘2 front of the net went out the _ . Penalties: None. "‘ list night at the Sports Arena. cape Breton goalie who had fal. Carron, G. MacLennan, R. Cor-|§’“%a:1’dw‘ Dunn’ L‘ Shepherd’ Third period, 3__combines, The Royals scored three fast ’ y’ Ien to the ice. Whitlock gave the Royals a four goal lead four minutes mier, E. O’Callaghan, B. Gallag- her, J. Doyle, A. Gardiner. Royals: Goal — Roper; Gouthro 10:47. Penalties: Josey SUMMARY 3:27, 17:59, Morrison 13:20. Car- First period: l—Royals, J roll 15:52. first period goals and then coast- ed to victory, adding three more de- . summerside High School tball team, which is tied second place in the Provin- High School Basketball Lea- By HARVEY BRUESCHER CHICAGO (AP) — New middle- "t champion Sugar Ray‘ Rob- ,-.. Wednesday was vague about possible June rematch with ‘on Basilio, but apparently has no intention of retiring mm The ring. Robinson c 0 n t i n ued playing 'H to get for sports writers. ‘ay night, he barred them . l1is._dressing room after heat- , Basilio on a split 15-round de- 'n.-,He held a press confer- ~ hours later in his hotel HII Wednesday, RoJinson’s handlers in an 11 a.m. conference, ‘ kept some 20 writers waiting ‘e his hotel door 45 minutes - admitting them. lloblnson, except for real or on weariness, appeared none worse for his gruelling match. was virtually unmarked, com- '=- with Basilio, who’ looked ‘sthough he was belabored with ball bat. l'I'lLY DRESSED Sugar Ray, clad in blue pan-ts, Iuesweater over a white shirt wearing an untied red-blue had slight coloring over his eye and had slight teeth Back Charlie Balle m (Coach), Eddie gue with Queen Square, is shown Boates, Butch Bethel, 5011‘-,wmg 3 practise at the Audi_ Eric Gemmel, Dick Conston, and torium. marks on his lower lip. “I feel like about 10 guys jumped on me,” said Robinson as he slou-ched in a chair. “I’m Pogped. I pretty near ache in eV91'y bone and I’m sore all over. even in my feet.‘ Told IBC President Jim Norris is talking about a June rematch, Robinson replied: “I don't know whether there will be anything. 1337 -anything, I mean I’m seri- ously considering the advice of a couple of good friends." V Did this mean possible retire- ment on five-time middle - weight champion? “I didn't say that,” Sugar Ray -said. Then the Harlem dandy, who at 37 still is just that, said he has a movie script on the life of a Mexican bull -fighter which he likes. N0 INTEREST IN MOORE Somebody suggested he might try again for the world light- heavyweight title held by ancient Archie Moore. Ray said: “I’m not interested in Mr. Moore other than to wish him well.” Robinson-‘ was asked whether he thought that: along about the 12th round the fight was going his way. Noruncla Mines’ Earnings Cut Sharply In ’57,Repo~rt Shows TORONTO (CP) — Noranda lines Ltd, big northern Quebec hirer-gold producer and head of hdespread mining interests, had fitmcome in "1957 of $11,932,000 ‘$2.66 a share, compared with «533,000 or $4.15 a share in 1956. Earnings from operations, the ual report comments, were 35915’ affected by lower cop- Drices, increased labor costs at the Noranda smelter and the acid plant at Cutler in Onta-rio’s Blind River area. This year, the report states, should refilect full-scale opera- tions at Gaspe Copper, earnings from the C u t l e r project, in- creased customs smelting and re- fining business, and substantially lower capital expenditures. PROSPECTING RESULTS Winston Smith. Robinson Not Sure?Abou'I tA»Rema'I'cI1 With Basilio “I felt it was going my way when the man said ‘the 'winner and new champion,’ not before.” Basilio .as a “one-eyed’ fighter? “He fought a pretty smart fight for ‘anybody,’ Sugar Ray an. swered. He smiled and said "that’s good” when told Basilios grotesquely swollen left eye ap- parently was not severely hurt. “He shouldn’t be mad at me for making him lose. I made more money for him than his managers ever did.” ' Each fighter is expected to col- lect‘ around $256,000 for the bout. Robinson c o n c e d e d Basilio talked to him during the fight. “He asked me to stop hitting him in the kidneys in the -late rounds. That’s all I heard him say.” Oppose B-an On Training Ranges ‘AI Sea GENEVA (Reuters) —- Britain and the United States joined forces Wednesday to oppose a Communist-bloc proposal to ban naval and air training ranges on the high seas. Vice-Admiral Oswald S. Col- clough of the U.S. defence de- partment told the 87-state confer- ence codifying the law of the sea that the United States rejects the Soviet Union. Albania and Bul- garia. , — The proposal would ban the ranges and c ombat training areas from the high seas “nr:1r foreign coasts or on international sea routes.” Opposing the joint Communist proposal, British delegate Sir What did Robinson think of. joint proposal but forward by the. V Front: Earl Campbell, Ron MacFarlane, Mike Scott (captain) Don MacEach.ern, Joe Dunsford.‘ S'SicIe Curlers . Retain Trophy The Summerside curlers suc- cessfully retained the MacLel- lan Challenge Trophy by de- feating the Mayflower Club of Halifax last night at the Sum- merside Curling Club by a total score of 60-35. , Following are the results: Harry Dickie (S) 15, Omar Mar.- quis (H) 12; Best MacWilliams (S), Jerome Lee (H) 12, Dr. Hilliard Clarke (S) 27, Keith Fraser (H) 11. HOCKEY SCORES By The Canadian Press N. 13. Senior Bath-unst 11 Camxpbellton 1 (Bathurst leads best-of-nine final 1-0). ' I Memorial Cup Buckingham 3 Cape Breton 2 (Best—of-«five eastern quarter- final tied 1-1). N. S.-P.E.I. Senior Charlottetown 6 Northside 2 (Charlottetown leads best-ofl seven semi-final 1-0). - Alec Randall said Britain never has excluded merchant vessels from naval exercise areas. ONUS 0N WARSHIP “The onus is always on the warship to avoid damage to mer- chant shipping,” he added. Britain Wednesday also sub- mitted a draft proposal that the conference should not pronounce “upon any question relating’ to nuclears te s t s but leave the, matter to the United Nations General Assembly." This British proposal was de- signed to counter a joint proposal submitted by. the Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia for the adoption of an article that would read: “States are bound to refrain from testing nuclear weapons on the high seas.” . in the second period. The Combines tallied once in third. The game started off fast with the Combines pressing to the at- tack, Frank Roper‘ made some fine saves in the opening minu- tes, after [about seven minutes of the play the Royals went one goal up, with Jack Ready doing the honors. Ready was coming in fast at the side of the net when he received a pass out from behind the net from Angie Carroll. The Northside goalie was caught off balance andithe hard shot got by him. ‘ Ready tallied again, seconds later on a hard shot taken from in front off the net, to give the lock and Allie Carver teaming up for a nice goal. Carver brought the puck into the North- side zone and while sidestepping a defender fell to the ice, just as he fell he managed to fire the rubber to Buck Whitlock who was coming in fast towards the front of the net, Whitlock’s shot went between the sprawled goalie and the post to score. The Combines started to roll back and finally scored at the 16:29 mark with Mccarron team- ing up with MacLennan and Andrea. f Roper had come out of his net to block Andrea’s shot but the Duck got’ by him and Mac- Carron tipped it into the open corner. , Both teams tried hard to score more goals as hte period wore on but both goalies came up with great saves. In the second period, the Royals _-really started to roll, the first period and again in the. later with assists from MacLeod and Skip Carver passed hte puck out to MacLeod at the blue line who in turn fired a hard shot towards a mass of players in front of the Northside net. The rubber hit Whitlock’s stick and rebounded into the net. The Combines started to come but time again were stopped by the Charlottetown defence and by the fine goal-tending of Frankie Roper. Once in the period the Combines had a great chance to score. After firing a hard shot the puck remained in the goal- crease behind Roper who had come out of hi_s net to block the shot. Junior MacLeod, always on the alert spotted the puck and stick-handled it away to ease the ‘their third goal of the period, a few minutes later with Art Perry getting credit for the tally. The Royals connected for their third goal of the period," a few minute.s later with Art ‘ Perry getting credit for the tally. Perry was stationed about ten feet in from the blue line when he received a pass from Whit- lock, Art let fly a hard shot that Madinsky, the Combines’ goalie had very little chance on. In the final stanza, the Royals just coasted to victory with the only tally of the period going to the Northsirde team. Aubry Gouthro scored this goal on a solo effort. His hard screen shot , hit Roper’s leg and bounced into the net. But it was a case of too little and to late and the Royals held of the Combines for the rest of the period and skated off the ice with a one game series lead. . Northside: Goal—J. Madinsky; 'I0fh. IMPORTANT NOTICE Prowse Bros. Ltd. wish to announce fhe return of the Hon. T. W. L. Prowse to active participation in this business on April 10th. In order to have all charge accounts brought up to date, bills have been rendered and must be i ‘ I R°Va1S 3 2'0 1ead- The ROY-“:15 pres-sure. remified by the above date. Some accounts are outstanding SU B went three goals up a few The Royals connected for ' t 1 , minutes later with Buck Wht- away foo long while others have been neglected by not paying monthly. Theseimusf be brought up. to date of once. otherwise we will have to fake drastic means to collect. Pledse give your immediate arrenfion to this before Mr. Prowse's return to the business on April SIGNED; H. II. JEWELL, Manager. I unurv-, rats II A ND Y IFOIIRIQ SIR 9 f 0 ,0‘ com/ms won: mum nucmnnm A COMPLETE I when x I-’= I-I WI KITCHEN wakksaorz FUR ONLY 00‘ vmmmc SHOWN $69.95“: EOR All 20 PIECES J ooilmsrra, A_I.iM0llS rum ' mom com 5&1 larver ' ‘ f; - d . - . . ' :0 CW5.“ , on wini.‘L"’.i‘é§li’.i‘. in .n.‘i’°e’;‘i. Deli-intgeifxg§;;§g*1gg,§;e1dé vgos . ”"%%”- H d t a i ‘ I W " ECORD HO 06 Mon inedxiigeg d1_§fg’0m“SV aoite and Gaspe yielded no conclusive R P ulet Mines Ltd, a copper-zinc “W. also in northern Que- lff on copper. This would be contradiction to the need for economic, defensive a n d I cooperation between the 1 States and Canada, and, fact, the free world." LTER WORK UP ‘Th? 1’9l>ort—signed by John R. I915. president, says opera- Sat Noranda were normal, “elm production increased 13' in the last quarter, larg- to receipt of copper con- .99?-zinc-silver property in On- . Manitouwadge dis t r i ct femcame into production in an average of 902 tons /' ally to the Waite Amulet 1c“y‘ Gold Mines, in Ontario’s I liplne area is increasing pro- mgby some 40 per cent. _ ammg up of Compania Min- ’ 3_ India, former gold pro- rln Nicaragua was com- adullllg the year and No- mts feceived liquidation pay- 1,5 m Otalhng $1,815,600 (U.S.) tubs-.1425 shares of La India's M Ti’. Empresa Minera de "aha INTERESTS - 3 the year Empresa and Amulet each acquired a ‘norfinlial interest in Empfesa ...§§=’ me "135 of Canada Wire and M C°- Ltd., were adversely med inventory losses in . “$1,000,000 caused by the ca “he Price of copper. doc (_30l>per Mines Ltd., at hvllle. Que., affected by a strike and 10W °°"pe’ Royal Winnipeg Rifles and later _ . . I 161 Great George St. Charlottetown, P.E.I. . ........ .. 8 ’ 3“ ‘ ' IIIII uunuouo in aiIiplii1ii7e(:znlie1i)\§ciyrx;1ilcl‘::Sal1? commanded the 9th Brigade. Minister of Highways. _Phone 6211 ------no ounucuu “ex *0 Gaspe were almost un- _ 5“ Year end at $34,490,- te from Geco Mines Ltd.,- results. Several properties are being held for further work. Good things are expected of two prop- erties in northwestern Ontario, one in Manitoba and two more in British Columbia. Noranda’s total revenue in 1957 was $35,773,421 compared with $43,280,189 in 1956. Of this, $29,- 055,038 was from metals pro- duced, corn-pared with $35,801,- 083. Depreciation provision was $3,728,795 compared with $2,371,- 339. Investments at cost, less amounts written off, are shown as follows,_ with 1956 figures in brackets: subsidiary companies $14,435,006 ($14,393,725); .s-s_,oci- ated and other companies $18,316,471 ($18,192,290). Advances, aside from that to Gaspe, are: subsidiaries $8,342,- 101 ($11,637.429); rther compan- ies $4,083,467 ($3,402,038). Name Aflclche To Washington LONDON, Ont. (CP) ~— Brig. Th-omas G. Gibson, area com- mander at London, has been ap- pointed commander of Canadian army staff and military attache in Washington, DC. Brig. Gibson will move to the U.S. capital about mid-August. He will he succeeded by Brig Frederick A. Clift, now director general of army personnel at Ot- tawa. ‘ B.rig. Gibson began his mili- tary career in 1925 when he en- First Canadian Tank School at Camp Borden which eventually became the Canadian Armored Corps. In 1940 he went overseas with headquarters of the 2nd 1 ' ivision. Ca1I,1,a(}ig1:§1a]13d he commanded the 4 t 1945 he com- tllsiea Thoind Brigade with man Feirst Division in Italy and AT THE IROLLAWAYI CLUB THURSDAY, Time 9:30 I-— 1230 Admission 35-: MARCH 27 ,5 ‘ PAVED I lbs. Charlottetown, DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS Province of Prince Edward Island 4 WEIGHT RESTRICTIONS In order’!-o properly protect the -paved roads of Prince Edward Island. and or the some time impose the minimum weight restriction. the following shall apply effective midnight Thursday. 20th March. 1. Vehicles registered for 16.000 lbs.. or less. are permitted gross weight of 8.000 Vehicles registered for over 16.000 lbs. This notice is given under authority of reg- ului-ions published ,3 May. I956. J. ROADS 195s=— I G. McacKAY, I F000 GRINDER DOES YOUR GRINDING WORK. WITH GREATER ECONOMY IN LESS TIME WITH BEST RESIIITS TE . sms son sis on OTHER our MIXERSI I FURNITURE CO. LTD. . - h _ , a San M1,,” L,,,__ man gf,‘§§n.§sof,,,r‘§1f,§§§“,nVl‘fi§ ,,E,;. are limited to one - half. registered T _ Mefiggoductng fluorspar mine permanent active miltitipt th weigh.|._ DEALERS NAME AND ‘DDR5? _ Earn In 1938 he was pose o e PIeasoNsend me the DORMEYER Mixer plus the Inc 2 shall table and 6 Piece Kitchen Utensils at your friend- winning sale price of $69.95. I will $I.O0 a week until paid in full. PRINT Name . . . . . . .... PRINT Address. . . to>0:cord-bcooooolétfivoooocccowoco Dflllxfl IIROME ', FINISH. v é P0)’ 31.00 down and ‘~ I on-on-aogoonouoonoooo c - o . . . .. 00034550006 "“‘m-I-<9’ . Prince Edward Island. Ilurin the the 7th Brigade . . “tl . . -- » th took over or V . " ” “me; £011? it1eIl1\lorthwest. Europe. _ W _, "*9 -Ma’rch£ 1908 ‘ .. 4 ' ~~—~ . . _ - . _ ' MA‘ ,, _-_ -.__... M ~ ‘‘‘,‘‘W ' — , ’ " T‘ I I T