’ iCiRLyERS TRY FOR TROPHY Pictured above are the \:four curlingl teams currently In com- petition at the Montague Curl- ing Club, for the Central Cream- eries Tyro Trophy. Due to travel- ling conditions, the fifth entry, the Alberton club was unable to participate. Following‘ are the Bob Hoare. Third Picture» Char- personal: Top Picture--—Montague .lottetown-- Bill Moreside, Gordon --Fred Vuozzo, Gen Koke, A. Bennett. A. Gillispie, John Gor- Robertson, Doug Sorrie. Second rill.Fourth Pictureu Summerside -Picture" R. C. A. F.— Ken ' O’- Eric Johnston, Stan Gay, Lloyd Malley, Reg McNutt, Ken Dewar, Lawless, Wyman Millar. ‘ Canacliansi Face Hardest Test ocIaY‘ With By EDSIMON ‘ 1- Canadian. Press ’Staff_ Writer OSDO, Norway (GP)-T_he Ca- nadians Wednesday lunched jovi- ally with the Russians, their ’ arch-rivals -in the world hockey ohampionships, and held two stiff practice sessions in preparation -‘or the toughest part of the tour- ney. - The leading, undefeated Cana- dian Whitby team——and the other top squads——had a layoff from »competition Wednesday but to- day will meet. Sweden, the de- fending champion, and only other unbeaten, untied team. It was Canada’: second free day. ; Finland and Poland, both trail- ing in the standings, provided the d-ay’s only aic-tion, playing to a 2-2 tie in a spectacular iiinish. ‘IIED IN POINTS ,. Canada and Sweden now are {tied in poin-t«s——w-ith six each-but the Canadians lead by "a wide 1 margin in goal spread, having «cored a fabulous 50 to only one reply in three games. Sweden has «scored 22 goals to five replies in _iCurIing' Today ;§For Montague - ' Curling tonight at Montague: :'. 7:00 P. M. 3.-East Ice: At. MacDonald, vs. I. 9. Phillips. 2; West ice: MacDonald. I 9:00 P. M. (Physical Fitness 3 East ice: G. Nicholson, vs. R. ‘ eck. ~‘? West ice: H. Clair, vs. M. Nic- holson. -CURLING DRAW ‘ The following is the draw for Thursday night at the Charlotte- town Club: '; '7 P.M. (Rotate) lee 1~—(Wh.o1esalers) A. Likely, J. S. lVI'~acDona1d, H. Spillett, W. R. MacNeill vs. (Dentists) Dr. Maclnityre, Dr. Gallant, Dr. McEacliern, Dr- MacKenzie. '3 Ice 2-(C.N.R.') H. Maclnnes, G. R. Greenough, N. Nicholson, G. Burge vs. (Engineers) R. Keith, T. White, F. Maclnnes, L. E. Wellner. flee 3-—(Bankers)- D. Be1l_ D. Beardsley, W. Hayward, A. W. 'Hynd-nian vs. (Finance) J. Bal- com. G. MacLeod, G. Roy, B. Daley. L Ice 4--(Doctors) Dr’. Giddings, Dr. Prowse, Dr. MacDonald, Dr. Beck vs. (Caterers) J. Square- brlggs, M. Bell, D. Hill, D. O’Rourke. ' L. McDonald, vs. V. 8:30 P.'M. - Ice 1-—-G. Ives,— D. MacPhail, 13. Cox, J. Johnston vs. C. Cud- m0re_ G. Vessey, Dr. Kelly, G. Wright. Ice .2.---G. Stewart, K. Acorn, P. Simmonds, H. Simpson vs. Dr. Cox. R. Evving. B. Mac- Dougall, D. Maclntyre, Ice 3—B. Rogerson. J. Be:il.on_ L. lVEacPhail, C. Whitenechi vs. J. Bnomhower, A. Carruthers, G. Wilson. M. Waddell. ' _.Ice 4—0PEN. ‘iiifftmrée igarrles. i The eight-team tou;..ament is a round-robin affair, with each team playing all the- others. In case of a tie in points, Ilhe_cham— pionship will go to the team with the greatest, s p r e a d between goals for and goals against. Russia and Czechoslovakia having the edge in goal spread. Then comes the United States with four points‘ and Poland and Finland with one each. Norway has three straight losses. Canuck manager Wren Bla‘i-r, each has five points, with Russia - Sweden “V fehratting i about todiay’s schedule, expressed a healthy respect for the husky Swedes, who-druibbed the United States 8-2 Tuesday night —— the first loss for the Americans; ' ' ~ ' “Th-is could_ be the most dangerous game ‘before ‘Russia,”_ the Whitby chief said. . ‘ Canada meets Russia Sunday, the final day of the tournament that began last Friday. In other games today, Russia meets Poland, Norway meets Finland and the United States meets ‘ Czechoslovakia. The West Prince All-Stars swamped the Summerside Inter- mediate Aces 1 -2 in Alberton last night to tie up their best of five ‘intermediate “A” semi final series at two games each. The first two periods proved unexciting with L. Richard scor- ing the only goal of the first period to make it one nothingfor the home team. M. Kinch upped the All-Stars scored in the middle frame followed by two quick goals by Summerslde, scored by J. Phillips and Gaudet to tie the game 2-2. . Shortly after the final period got underway the Summerside team objected to the referring of Alphonse Richard and left the ice and refused to return until he was removed from the game. A few minutes later the All- Stars commenced a scoring spree for a total of eight markers with- out a reply from the Summer- side team who played the last two periods with only one spare following an injury to their goalie, W. Campbell and the absence of Mark Delaney. Campbell was hit below the left eye by a high fly- ing puck and was taken to the Western Hospital for treatment. Dela_ney suffered a face injury in a fall between periods. W. Campbell had fourteen stops in the first period with forty stops being handled in an‘ expert manner by Grady who replaced him in the Summerside net. Thirty-five stops. were attended to by B. Bernard in the All-Stars goal. STANDINGS Canadian curling championship standing after five rounds: Won Lost Alberta . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4 0 , Ontario . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4 1 British Columbia 3 2 Saskatchewan . . . . . . . . . 3 2 Newfoundland . . . . . . . .. 2 2 Manitoba . . . . . . . . 2 2 Quebec . . . . . . . . . .. 2 2 Nova Sr-olia . . . . . . . . . . .. 2 3 P.I‘<2.l. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2 3 Northern Ontario . . . . .. l 3 New Brunswick . . . . . . .. (I 5 (Eyes: Manitoba, Quebec, Al- berta, N ewfouiidland, Northern OllIal"l()) West Prince AII-Stars In . , IO.-2% Victory Over S’Side. G. Matthews ‘got the hat trick for the All-Stars. L. Gaudet netted a pair and W. Stewart, C. Bernard,_and M. Kinch chalked up singles. i L. Gaudet; of the All - Stars lineup got the only penalty of the game. Referees were C. Bungay and A. Richard. Morell Beaten a By Slierlorooke Fighting back from a 3-0 deficit. the Sherbrooke Meteors beat Morell at Civic Stadium in Sum- merside last night by the score of 4-3. It was the first game in a best-of-three sirni-final series for the Island Intermediate “C” Championship. Morell fired three goals without a return in the first period. Sherbrooke scored a lone tally in the second making it 3-1. and three counters in the final frame to win the contest. Sher- brook had the better of the play throughout, but Donald Mac- Donald in the Morell net put a ing. . SUMMARY First Period-1. Morell-B. Mac- Adam (Thompson) 1.12. 2. Morell- Thompson (B. MacAdam, R. Mac- Adam) 9.36; 3. Morell-Eldershaw (R. MacAdam) 18.46 Penalties-- None. ' Second Period--4. Sherbrooke— Waite (Sonier) 5.30; Penalty- Coffin. Third Period--5. Sherbrooke-C. Simmons 9.21; 6. Sherbrooke-E. Sonier (Deighan) 14.37; 7. Sher- brooke-. Deighan (Simmons) 19.- 05. Refers-es» Bill Ledwell and Dougie Arsenault. IFresh Potted Meat M5473 POULTRY 4235 DIAL 4235 FRPIE DELI\-’ER Y ' . a big sophomore season for St. sterling exhibition of net guard- Charlottetown Royals and Sum- merside Aces resume their best- of-nine series for the Island Senior hockey title tonight at the Sports Arena. Play will commence at 8.15, as usual. After taking a. 12-6 lacing In the series opener Monday night at Civic Stadium, the pesky Aces rebounded to hold the Royals to a 9-9 draw at the Sports Arena Tuesday night,‘ and they will be out in force to square the round in tonight’s contest. LINEUP CHANGES Buck Whitlock, playing-coach of the Royals, said last night that Claude (Angie) Carroll would be‘ back -in the lineup for this third game of the series, also that Frankie Roper will be in the nets, replacing Thane Doyle, who stopped the first two games. Carroll suffered a slight knee injury Monday night and was kept out of the second game, but Whitlock says he will be ready to‘ go tonight. The veteran playing-coach was anything but pleased over his team‘s showing Tuesday ni ht. “We are going to have to improve Three Dodgers In Car Crash‘ VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Three Los Angeles Dodgers play- ers suffered minor injuries early Wednesday when a car driven by Duke Snider made a sudden stop and threw them against the dash and windshield. The worst injured was pitcher Johnny Podres, who had six stitches taken in a cut in his, forehead after he struck the wind- shield. Snider received a cut on his left knee, the one which has been troubling him, a.nd Don Zimmer received bruises on his face and knee. Ken Boyer Back In I956 Form. ST.» PE»'I‘E‘RBvURG. Fla, (A?) Third baseman Ken -Boyer, who slumped badly l'ast season after Louis Oavrdiinvals, is back in his old 1956 batting groove. “It looks like Boyer finally. has started to swing a bat like he did two years ago," manager Fred Hutchinson said Wednes- day. ’, The Cards took’ movies of Boyer last season. They showed he held his arms close against the body in a cramped batting style. Now he's poised, the bat held well away from the body. He batted .265 last season with 19 home runs and 62 ru-nis-b»atted- in, A sharp skid from his .306 mark in 1956 with 98 runs batted in and 26 homers. . CO. v _ Fine Footwear For the Family 164 Queen_St. TONIGHT II:'I5 P. M. 3 CFCY-TV‘ , CHANNEL ‘I3 and Hon. GEORGE NEES MINISTER OF TRANSPORT Hon. DAVIE FULTON MINISTER OF JUSTICE Hon. ALVIN HAMILTON MINISTER OF NORTHERN AFFAIRS AND NATIONAL RESOURCES Published by the Progressive Conservative Party o_/Canada ,wiuoI-rr SHOE ? A all down the line to make a strong showing against the Cape Breton League winner,” he said, “and we'll have to play better hockey if we want to beat these Aces. The time has come to get down to serious playing.” As far as the second game is concerned, it will go into the re- cords as a point for each team, which means that the first team Maple Leafs Beat Hawks TORONTO (CF) —— Toronto Maple Leafs yielded t-wo lightning goals in the first period Wednes- day night, then bounced back to defeat Chicago Black Hawks 5-2 in a National Hockey League game. The victory. Toronto's 21st in 61 games this season, kept Leafs in the running —— although only mathematically —- for a Stanley Cup playoff berth. They have nine engagements left in the 70- game schedule and trail Boston Bruins, holders of the fourth and last playoff spot. by six points. The Leaf scoring was shared by centre George Armstrong, left- winger Dick Du-ff, defenceman Ron Stewart and rightwingers Tod Sloan and Barry Cullen. Left- wi-ngers Ted Lindsay and Ron Murphy tallied for Chicago. , CROWD STUNNED The crowd -of 12,557 was stunned when the last - place Hawks broke into a 2-0 lead early in the first period. Lindsay got his goal by tipping in Ed'Litzen- berger’s rolling shot from -behind the nets at the 53-second mark while Sloan was sitting ou—t a hooking penalty. ’ Murphy scored at 3:56 with a _75-foot shot‘ that bounced crazily into the nets as goaltender E Chadwick grabbed for it. First period: 1. Chicago, Lind- say (Litzeniberger, Vasko> :53; 2.. Chicago. Murphy (Vasko) 3:56; 3. Toronto, Armstrong 5:21. Penalties: Sloan :39, Nestor- en7..3. Pulford 9:11, Vasko 16:39, Mahovlich 19:36. Second period 4. Toronto, Duff (Anms-tronig) 4:15; 5. Toronto, Stewart (NIahovl=ich, II a. r 1‘lI. a) 6:28; 6. Toronto, Barry Cullen- (Brian Cullen. Stewart) 11:45. Penalties: James 3:34, Slcov 6:57, Morrison 7:58, Cushenavn 8:18. Nesterenko 10:34, 14:10,” Mahay- lich 12:33, Stewart 19.42. Third Period: 7. Toronto; Sloan -(Armstirong, Dim!) 19:41. Penal- bies: Thomson 2:12, cushenan 8:28, Reaume 14:33. Stops: H311 ‘ . 9 11 14-34 Chadwick 3 5 (5.15 Maelean 8: Son sauss & SERVICE Electrical Contractors 11-7 Kent -St. Dial 7135 Motor Rewinding ' and Small Appliance ’ Repairs (Reaume) . SMOKES FQII CANADIAN MILITARY PERSONNEL sewing with the « United Nations Emergency Force in the Middle East‘ , \ ‘I29 sends 400 EXPORT CIGARETTE5 or any other Macdoncild Brand Postage included Mail order and remittance to: OVERSEAS DEPARTMENT MACDONALD TOBACCO INC. P.O. Box 490, Place d'Armes, Montreal, One. This olor Is sub|uI lo any change In Government Regulations. ADMISSION: i’Thomas H. MILLS , HOCKEY TONIGHT THE SPORTS ARENA 3.15 P. M. CH'TOWN ' ROYALS V S’S|E ACES ADULT-—75c CHILDREN-35c Royals And Aces Meet In 3rd Series Game Tonight to get ten points in the series will be the winner. Royals now have three points, and Aces, one. In Tuesday night's game. no previous ruling had been laid down to cover a tie at the end of regulation time, and in the ensuing confusion a I0-rrlinule overtime period was agreed to by both teams. At press time last night, representatives of both teams were working on a new overtime plan, and it is expected that it will have all games play- ed to a finish. School Series Resumes Friday J,-,.,da‘\. ,_.,,,;n;ng at Sport Arena 4 fans will have the pleasure of seeing some of the smartest. WORLD HOCKEY OSLO, Norway (CPI ~ Stand-I; ings in the world hockey cham- 6 this area \’\’Il€ll Q ~ and Queen Charlotte High boysifslcrifooli . renew their struggle’ for the and Provmcial hockey Q.S.S. presently leads tliis best- 33°’ ‘.9132 of-three sm-ies after taking the wamfog fastest hockey being played in: ‘ pionships at the end of Wednes- d ' playi * ays W L 'I' F A 1’ Canada 3 n 0 so 1 6 Sweden 3 0 0 22 5 6 Rugs)"; 2 0 I. 24 5 5 Finland 0 4 1 545 1 C‘zechosIovak»ia 2 0 1 16 .5 5 United Sta-tes 2 1 o 2113 4 Poland 0 3 1’835 1 Norway 0 4 O 3 37 0 The -(’Jl1_ar~Io...etown Gum-aim . I . r -. city: 1. '99! tit1es.I rm” RECORDL AT THE‘ Roi TONIGHT. ruuksns, I FROZEN FOODS) - amps urn, BEEF, TURKEY on i ’ CHICKEN PIES - . 2 for 69: Sign man on CERTIFICATE ON PACKAGES Zero Pack Fancy Quality, _l-Iaddock PEAS. pkg; .. 22; I"-It=L'LE"|'S. lb. . . . . 37¢ ‘SILVER SEAL.-‘-I6 oz. 1 PEANUT HEINZ I . \ BuiTE MEXICAN ORANGES . Emiiiifu As . 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