3395'; Bertoia Leads Canadians To Three Medals Wed. 0 PAULO. Brazil lCP-APH Tits/:British Columbia half ' ‘ one~two finish in roughest competitions on I program. bertoia. a five-foot. lO-lnchl 155.90.,“ agriculturist. boosted! Canada's over-all 801d total here to six. including three pushed DON BERTOIA meduillb inch runner. and Gairdner Lieut. Ernie Cunliffe of the U.S. the Canadian silver- 1 ing in the decathlon was one of the highlights of Canada‘s per- formances here so in the competition after seven events but when Martin cleared 14 feet 11% inches in the pole vault to earn a whopping 1.122 points. he was too far ahead to be caught. Martin. 24. set a Games rec- ord of 7,335 points in winning. Gairdner. a. scored 6,812 points to win the silver and crack his own Canadian decath- lon record by 505 points. Hec- tor Thomas Martinez of Vene- zuela. the half-way leader. fins ished third with 6.751 points. The program included pole vault, discus. broad jump. jave- lin. high jump, loo-metre sprint. dim-metre and 1.500-metre runs. 110metre hurdles and shot put. Bertoia won the BOO-metre run with a Games-record time of one minute 48.3 seconds. Ohlemann finished in 1:48] and ished third in 1248.8 in track and field and one each ‘. medal mill to 17- Caflfldl 813° us. wms ygcn'm'va in rowing. ics. . Oiilemann. a lanky six-foot, diving and gymnast. ihas bronze medals. including one Gail‘dner's Second-Place show- continued to dominate the over-lhas been made or suggested but i The United States. suffering in the track and field program. p. us to make high voltag areas INTERRUPTION NOTICE- There will be an interruption of electric power on our Western Transmission System on Sunday, May 5th, between the hours of 1:00 pm. and 5:00 m. This power Interruption is required to permit e connections between our "muting plant and new generating equipment now being installed In our Charlottetown Steam Plant. The areas affected will be from: Charlottetown Limits to Borden and adjacent Milton to Travellers’ Rest and adjacent areas. St. Eleonora to Tignish and adjacent areas. MARITIME ELECTRIC W 494343 Games picture however. It took both gold medals in the star and lightning classes of yachting when the results of these—4h which Canada did not compete—were announced Wed- nesday to boost its gold-medal total to 74. Brazil is next best with seven. followed by Canada and Argentina with six each. Canada has several chances to add to its medal totals when the track and field program winds up Friday and Saturday ;after taking today off. 1 Jennifer «Jenny» Wingerson. :a Toronto private easily qualified for the final Sa- turday in the women's BO-metre hurdles. winning her heat. Of the six final track events run off Wednesday. including the ‘decathlon which began Tues- day, the United States won out three events—the decathlon. the 10.000 metres and the women's iah-born Peter McCardle of toes by more than 200 yards far. He led.‘ Air Force. the early leader. fin-y secretary, : New York won the 10.000 me-. .Richardson With Grea HALIFAX (CP) —— Two cham- one finnrdimr SECOND SECTION Charlottetown, Thurs. May 2, 1963. RATHER THAN BE TRADED Veteran Dickie Moore Announces Retirement , .they will aarrcilply to the British MONTREAL ,(cpi .. men. .half to wind up with n on .45 Moore came up to the Cana- Bowl! 30 of Control to have Moore. twice National Hockey ,goals and 46 assists. diens in 1952 from the old Mont- the 1.30"”; 59‘“ TehcoflmFed 9‘ League scoring champion and It was the first. and to date real Royals of the defunct Que-j; firm“ mp". ‘3 amlmmsmll :all-star left wing. said Wednes- !the only, time two players on bec Major League but. plagued at 9- ‘ ' day he is retiring. lthe same club amassed moreeven then by injuries and‘ The listed Empiretitle-holder e top performers ithan 90 points in a single sea-informed out again twice. he didlis Dick Tiger of leegll. who ,during Montreal Canadiens' re- 1‘son. .not become a regular until the now fights out of New liork and !cor five - year grip on the t Moore was chosen all - star 1954-55 season. I! currently recognized by the istanley Cup, Moore said he told Ileft wing in both 1958 and 1959 As a junior he_played for two National Boxrng Association as igeneral manner Frank Selke of and he was second all-star left Memorial Cup Winners. the 1949 the world middleweight cham- this decision after he had been .wing in 1961. .Montreal Royals and 1950 Mont- pion. llnformed he was up for trade. g I His capacity for a strong real Canadiens. .Selke said he hopes core, 32, :* jfinish stood him in good steadl He Winds up his NHL career abuser“ boxing associations re. .‘will reconsider his decision be- {again during the season just-with regular - season totals of cognize paul pander of 3mm“ [ore next season but he will not : ended. Crippled by an old knee %4 goals and 340 assists for as the world middleweight king. "quarrel" with it. 1 .injury. he saw little action until 594 points. His 254 goals placed‘ Grpaves eld the British Em. "Dickie is still far too good January but closed with a rush h‘m fifth among all-time sf'0"ei's Dire mle after decisionjng Tiger ,a playertoretire from hockey." in Clam 50 'Hints on 24 goals still active at the 9M 0‘ the in Edmonton June 22 1960. but 9 Selke said "no specific trade and 26 assists. [here Saturday when Canadian imiddleweight title holder Blair lRichardson of South Bar. N.s.. |defends his crown against Wilt caves of Edmonton and De- troit. . Co-promoters Gus Maclellan i e New York and Massa- 3 1962-63 season. i in has been made clear that ment in the preceding 12 months some players could be traded .s and he (Moore) could have been ' its... 'one of them.” i DICK“: Moo“ 1 Moore reached the peak of: ' lhis 12-season NHL career in theinext season wrth 36 goals and . e ' ‘ sponsored by the United States . a !Professional Golfers Associa- i I _ ition. a l1958-59 season when he scored‘48 aSSists for 84 points. That a record 96 points and won hlsiperformance sparked the Cana- o— Gene Littler. who scored three straight victories'in the tourna- ‘ment in 1955-56-57. is back along with a fellow Californian, Bill second consecutive scoring title. Idiens to flhe firstdof five straighé. Casper J h lost b n H 'd Wed esda : “M tuturelNHL tites an a thir . . I . .1 . iseirslalvlontrezl. Iiiav. ho wish‘straight Stanley Cup. But the LAS VEGAS. Nev. I‘APl —iplon Nicklaus. v‘hr} wulbe play- Sign? Palm"; PF" ml 10 play anywhere else. ,best wag yet to come_ ~Golf's big three. Arnold Palmer, . ing here for the‘first time. The ‘ . y me P35 “’mne” qua ’ [DISCUSSED WITH FAMILY ‘ The following year Moore quach Nicklaus and Gary Player. top purse vnow'is $13. died for the 1963 tournament— r “It‘s something I've discussed a distant third in mid - season too“- thEir final pram“ swmgs sm‘th. Amcas. Player: Who 5with my family for some time scoring when coach Toe Blake. wmo'zss’diy on that "f "(h the ffiEdefég 2?: final: ! - ‘ . - v . ournamen o 0 am- .. . _ . and the only answer ll retire saddled With an injury - riddled Dims, a 724mm battle against 24 . windup in 1962 and merits anew ti Palmer. Littler and Jerry Bar. nt.‘ squad. put him on a line with S In pionships may be on the line‘ Wednesday ‘ Tiger won it back in November langles ves Sat. 'of the same year with a ninth- round TKO win over Greaves. also in Edmonton. LOST INTEREST? Maclellan said it as cars Tiger is no longer interested in the Empire crown and has not defended it in more than two years. "There‘s no reason why the Greaves - Richardson bout should not be sanctioned as an Empire title fight." Neither Greaves nor Richard- son is expected to have any trouble making the 160 ' pound weight limit for their Saturday meeting. in two previous bouts last summer, both easily made the limit. Greaves successfully defended his Canadian crown in the first meeting in Glace Bay. N. with a 10th - round technical knockout over his 22-year-old opponent. Richardson. a divinity college student. turned the tables in the rematch last September with an eighth-round TKO over the 27~year-old Edmontonian. BOTH LOST Both fighters have fought once since their last meeting. Both lost decisions to top - ranked fighters. Greai'es' professional career spans over more than 60 bouts includes varied ccess against such big-name battlers as Sugar Ray Robinson. Tiger Gene Fullmer. Spider Webb and Joey Giardello. 'I‘he less-experienced Richard- son now boasts a record of 35 wins. i‘cur losses and a draw. Advance ticket sales for their third meeting Saturday indicate a gate exceeding previous At- lantic provinces‘ records for boxing. her The iatter's total score of 268 in 1960 still stands as the tournament record. * . . . ‘ ' 1 rofessionals. ‘ Moore rose to stardom wrthdean Beliveau and Marcel “Va.” ‘ Lss points in the 1956-57 season iBonin. 80m: 12$; c112; dangl‘fl and won the scoring title the. Moore and Benveau took on today over the par 36.3572 ‘ I a sustained two-man 500‘?ng t I ,t l r lover favored Osvaldo Suarez of [streak seldom if ever equalled D‘iififmef" :01": eyr egg, c355,; gArgentina, the 5.000-metre gold in the NHL. Moore got 60 points whacks .1" the winnervs end. jmedallisti Doug Kyle. the Cal-jin the second half of the sched-‘lmflde it a lucky seven ‘gary .geo ogist who won the sil- ule to wind up with 96 points on f . U - 1 l - - _ .ve '1959 when he finishedldl goals and 55 assists snd§°2§2s ’000 w’th'mm mun” he W” the saha” “m” ‘second to Suarez. was fifth. lBeliveaugot 59 in the second 7,013 1 Additional Sport Page 14 LEMA HAS CHANCE And the same applies to hon- eymooning Tony Lema. who fin- Eished second to Nicklaus in the Masters. This is Lema's first 1try here but the desert atmos- ie e may appeal to him. Las :yard route. iover some of the same opposi- ‘ his time Palmer is rated notion. better than an even chance with The field is limited to winner: ‘fliis co-favorite. Masters cham- of at By CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN Ch'lCAGO (APJ—No matter 1 P.E. H Is e s1895 1961 Mercury 1 Ton 3 cyl. heavy duty trans., and S ply tires $1795 0 cyl. Mint job. 1961 Mercury 1 Ton Dual wheels and new 31850 brown in color and 6 cyl- Long wheel base. 1959 bed a 1/2 Ton Pickup, new pant job, “SM 3895 1958 Mercury V2 Ton This trade-in on a ’08 is a MORE PEOPLE Fro—IRA" Over Stewart Motors Ltcl. Do Business Where Business is Being DONE . . . This is the key to your BEST DEAL — Because we must SELLI SELL! SELL! SELLl-No Wailing, NogFuss, we mean business. Our policy is to deal if atqll possible. See STEWART MOTORS LTD. and SAVE 4-- SAVE — SAVE 1962 Chev. Va Ton 0 cyl., dark blue and in good condition OP 1962 Mercury Monterey sedan V-S, Green and White. auto. tans. Radio, Power Steering. C u s t o at Radio, Low Mileage. east. one major tourna- how you look at professional COME IN NOW WHILE SELECTION IS COMPLETE $3195 $895 $1650 tally priced for this sale. this sale at only 1961 Meteor Sedan v.5 a one owner car with low mileage. two-tone and very clean. 1960 Zephyr Sedan 6 cyl.. white with radio and very clean . . . a real good buy. 1959 Volkswagen Delmar. this car is in perfect shape and is dark blue low mileage. 1959 Chevrolet Bel-Air Sedan. 8 cyl.. new gleaming white paint job and looks like a million dollars. S vs Sedan. fully reconditioned Ranch Wagon (V8) Two-tone and ready to roll and is spec- blue in color and la priced for $1051) $395 1962 Mercury Monterey Sedan. 0 cyl. Black, Std. Trans. Low Mileage. 1955 Pontiac Coach. come early and avoid the crowd. this one will go «"103. S , eacn other H Wrestling Seen .. £321.24. .. . Big Money Sport iwrestling—if you look at all—- ithere's big money in human be ings making pretzels out of A million groans. a million dollars." says Fred Kohler. . ohler. 60-year-old Chicago lpromoter. in ' of the ham I market. He‘s been in the busi- . ness 80 years. 2 One of his promotional tricks ‘. is to tape a television wrestling i show. give it free to a local sta- : tion. then several days after it ‘_ has been telecast, move in with i the same cast. of anatomy ben- ‘ ders to perform in the es . A million dollars pass” through his hands yearly. he 1 says. SOME CLEANED UP 5 "Back in the Depressron years .of the 1930's. people who didn't commit suicide watched the woos." says Kohler. "And some vwrestlers cleaned up. i remem ber Gus Sonenberg coming in .' off a tour with his suitcase stuffed with $35,000. He didn‘t 'believe in banks and was not ‘afraid anybody would try to ,take it away from him." 2 Kohler says a wrestler must ‘have three things: Ability. Lahowmanship and personality, ."T-here are about 75 wrestlers 'in top demand today. but none .has all three of these assets like Buddy Rogers. I "Budd is in four or five shows a week. gets 11 per cent the gates and travelling ex- penses. He makes better than 8200.000 a year. ; Kohler scoffs at. charges of matches being out ' and - out akes. “It depends a your defini- tion of the word." he ooncedes_ ,"They aren't fixed. The better iman usually wins. The thing is he doesn't always win as quickly as he can. This is an- tertainment. and prolonging u ‘ is good CAN BE ROUGH "it can get awfully rough. ~Rogcrs was out. of action 13 iweeks in 1962 with a broken . neg." .1 Audiences are made up of 40 .pcr cent women. 45 per cent ;men and the rest teenagers. jlsays Kohler. v For every audience situation. Kohler has a wrestling type to i use. Bo Bo Brazil draws a large | Negro following. The Latins flip lfor Argentina Rocca. ( Killer Kowalski has his Po Ilish admirers. rmans go for lthe Bavarian Boys. Good-look- 'ing‘Bob Konovsky. ear-Chicago ' wn iwls. at s the most amazing VOUXI’IU" s ; thing to happen to Kohler? I “Watching 38,622 customers Sedan. Thls auto ls h! SM jam Comiskey Park June 30, audition and loves to look for 1961. to see Rogers meet Pat Impossible parking places. I O‘Connor." he says. "We had a . gate of $141345." f It was the highest price ever paid for him. 5 Sneakers! standout performer 1959 Ford Coach. 0 cyl.. color coral and white and h only 1960 Meteor Sedan I cyl. a real snappy car that is til-tone paint Job and priced to go at 1959 Bedford Van 3995 I960 Mercur'y C-850 Tilt Cab M.¢Inphtafyeqatpped.gsodtfres,goodm.m m.Athheahooi-qhtraller.rcmblobm $ 1795 $1395 1959 Chevrolet 1958 Chevrolet Sneakers! $ Yes. we really 1960 Plymouth ‘ .. S gal .35 Ranch Wa on. 6 cyl. dark 3 ,‘c | a e m m ".1 M condition. .I “h” k . .0 In “'5... am .5 . me . Mm. bars.“ "1ch l '8!“ ‘0 desert hrs-as h ester and i I 0“ you about a only ' """ "3"" " r" ' at this low. low price of only k m .__ 36475 OPEN NIGHTS TILL 9 PM. ' V -: fiwkw‘ ‘ 0 season. Theerghl Shoe Co. will give you a receipt with every pair of sneakers bought for men. ' When llS - IS SPECIALS almys I age value p n few on hand start buying snea'kers for it’s OPEN SATURDAY «mu m 32":ni:'“‘1i..3“tt.:: “are i, counts. TILL 5 $100. to $300. “wt-13hr. Shoe 3:.“ . if I i