Best Players AigHave Best Life VA.\1Ct)U\’l~IR <(‘Pi — Know "You know what’? That Joe how to’ tell a Slll'>€‘l'-«*l3l‘ from DiMaggio stayed in a suite that :;I,i::£d'1';:".?“l):l:lCr at baseball cost Is. thousand bucks a week. Take it look at their living Ma"! quarters. Lasko_ a 20tl«pound fastballer. Bflb LHSKO. 24-_\’(‘fll'-Old \'an- has begn working out in 3 gym couvcr ri_1bt handcr who's try- here ,0 gel read‘, for Spring in}: to make the major leagues , ' . ‘ with the Los :\ll,'1(‘l(‘S Dodgers l”""l"E- H9 has b"°" ad"'5"d system after four years in the ll(‘'” be Plfiylllll lm‘ llll’ limitl- New York Yankcrs chain. found ers‘ No. l farm club at SD0- oiit about it last spring at l-‘ort kane. Laud:-rdale. Fla. Last year he pitched 170 inn- Lasko was sliaring a room ings with Richmond and" Aug- 1 Reinforced Quebec Aces Good Bel To Top League By GERRY McNElL to finish first in the five-team ibeen next to unbeatable at "He has stabilized the club" QUEBEC (Pl—'I‘he only Ca- Eastern Division of the nine- home and almost as successful says general manager Robe}; nadian team in the American club league. ‘on the road. Martineau.. “The fans like him Hockey League appears headed: EarLv this season. Aces were ll-‘OUND A LEADER and everybody is plgying bet for the playoffs for the first following the pattern ‘of pievi-i Wayne Hicks. chunky ri.ght-‘ter." time in its five seasons. ,ous years in the league, losing ; winger. has turned into the top_ Attendance has averaged 7. In ct. Quebec Aces, reju-,more than they were winning. _l scorer in the A-BEL and such for-‘$00 si ' venated by two National Hockeyjfiome crowds seldom got above ‘ wards as Terry Gray. Le0I;tlll£ a peak of 10.149 Jan. 12 League veterans. are good betsjthe 5.000 mark in a beautiful I Roehetort. Cleland Morison. Blll,when Aces were fighting for '*'——’*‘—"'""“ “““'”“.coliseum that can seat 10,056. lDineen and Ed Hoekstra arrtirst place. The club 1, ham when Lorne tGumpl iclicking. ting them in around the learn; the colorful little, Worsley is playing well and_ too. attracting standing mom § Even R-aces Scheduled iworsley. i oalie. came down from Mont- shis shouted directions have crowds on recent trips to get, For causeway real Canadlens in November. [helped allay the panic that shey and Providence, seem A hang up race card is plan. ‘shake a combination of lethary Aces still couldn't tofoften seized his mates when Harvey seems to like Quebec they were hemmed into thelr‘City. It's close to Montreal i l :with Jim Bouion. another young usta and struck out I and "ed M. Saturday Aflmnmh atiand ¢on.{u5|on_ own z0n¢_ ‘when, his family “veg. And he l>lll'll<’l” W110 mad? ll “W1 the Walked 55- _ And "i, “"l“b"‘°“ the causeway, Pom» wen finedl Then Doug Harvey arrived Harvey has become the team ‘ says there's "a hockey atm05_ L Yanks. Ho recalls that the room gpmes against major league and e.,.,.,,iy balanced c1a55e5,lDec. i and that night 9,871 fansl leader. The 39-year-old Mont-lpherc here." . . _ . . Wm be ,a(.ed_ iturned out to see the Aces and l realer. whose hefty salary ap-3 "Look at this rink." he said, if you're an are left runs in 30 innings. Race fans Wm be pleased torthe man rated by some as the; parently scared off other NHiJ.s'”ll was built for hockey. L.-mk llalldel‘. T011 E91 bomelllillfl hel- “Sometimes there's a pl‘0ll.\' know that pa,-hmutuai “.age,—i,,g lg reate st defenceman of all clubs after a couple of seasons:at the big sheet of ice. the in. ,ter. thin line between making it and Wm be 0pe,.a,ed_ Race time jsfflme. Quebec lost 3~2 to Hershey with New York Rangers. isidividual seats." i "whitey Ford had one that not making it." he says. recali- 2.15 pm_ Fohowmg are the en- ‘Bears, who then were divisionusought out by his mates and is: The $4,000,000 Coliseum M, ‘cost 65 lJll('l(S a day." ing how in past seasons a pulled mes. ;leaders. Two nights later Aceafthe centre of attention of the built for hockey —- apeclficaih, l And if \"0lI'l‘e an all - time chest muscle. appendix opera- ~ {lost again to Hershey in over-zkids who wait at the arena door for Jean Beliveau in 1949 when r . cost $40 a day he allowed only three B .great who has graduated to tion and a slump prevented him CLASS I) PACE time. But since then they've after games. TPunch Imlach‘s incompng-ah}, ,coaching ranks. you really live from breaking into the Yankees l“al‘.s'if‘l(l€‘,_L_\'nl’l Wa_v.C. He 'hmim. was the hem of the NW’ .in style, lineup Spirit, Bonnie's Watchim. SpIr- l*> ' ‘ it's Freedom, Jolly Grattan. 'Craig‘s Abbe. My Lady. CLASS B.T. AND P. '1 rile r m 9 d ales S GT {.,;,-;;g,;_ 335;: For ‘B’ Playdown (‘LASS A.T. AND P. ‘ l‘rotidy's Dream. My Hero. Millie Lee. Sturdy .limmy.Adio~;‘ Here is the inlcrmediato 'R' lvlarcb lfith. 1964. Winner of: 3mm, 3udhmg_ Grey Eag[e_ qhe “.59,-ton Curling Rink e1e_ h0Ckt‘.V SC-h€‘dlllP 85 P9108590 by Zone 2 has Choice Of first game. 1 Drilio Hal. Island Prince, Bill 2 ven Island rinks competing for .Art ' chairman of I ' game is HPCPSSBPY. G. Command, Darie Watc-him.‘gthe Maritime Provinces Lions I SEEK TEXTILE BOOST GOTHENBURG. Swedu ltReutersl-—An eight-man Cana- di ade mission visited fac. P B ° I G an tr e tories and textile firms here 4,, art of a tour aimed at boosting er I n l Canadian textile exports. [pd - ~b_v E, G. Gorrtdzon of the (Tang. ‘ ldian Department of Trade and Play \\‘ill continue all day bat- (0mm9r('e_ the group of hush urday and conclude with a ll“~‘~‘mPll also planned to visit dance in the Legion dance hall.;?"ra8d5 “ll §:‘°°kh°lm dlmlll Schedule for the first tli r ee l£ HOW DO THEY FIT You will not have any ll'Illl- out with .~pt‘t-inl hats for the Isle distinguishing (‘harlotte- gala \\'c(‘k in this photo Mrs. town Brier committee offic- lnez Gallant. left. and Mrs. Barbara Roper. are seen fit- polo Yntcs. ; Al.BEll'[‘ON A Lions Club: CLASS C PAC!-I ;Bonspei| opens this evening in ('hicl Jtisticc 'i‘hane A. Canin- bell. Brier triistoo. Mrs. Gal- . _ lant and Mrs. Roper are co- ials once the mg sho“ go" chairmen of the Ladies’ Brier ... STUDENTS DEMONSTRATE ‘Ill/llélilirltwgy ’l‘:ct'v bl: illngxtvllre h(a'-l:ild:?tr Sii?i°" committee. hock?!’ committee of the Island gale receipts will be spllt by Jester Jane. Trophy donated by P.E.l. Con- rounds: ._. .'..._'__ .. . . .-e .—i.—...‘ '——»—1— ~-———~~——~- ~~—~-~~-——-—— A-e—— branch of thc Amateur Athletic both teams. also the third flame"-‘ '*—*—“—‘—* crate prod“;-ts_ l~‘lul)AY 7 P.M. ,\'ri-:Ns (Route,-5) .._ 5,“... . 1,U"l‘"1 ‘ll (-‘3n«'l‘l5l- will he playod al h“m9 "l l-l19'fir5| game, Same rules apply 35% The lfnphy wag won ]a,~i[ ycar (3l‘lal‘lnlll"l0\\'ll N0. 1 V5. Slll1l- I 3.000 Gl‘f‘(‘l( §lU(lE‘l'ilS f‘l0m0n- . {Zone i — King‘; (‘ouuty: team‘ scoring the most goals in~ahm.e if A third game '5 he(.&,_ hy Ed 1~,”.m,r-A ovum,-y rink merside .\‘o. 1.. Parkdale vs. striated outside the Unllpd a n a a S n O 2 l. tlnnrnctown vs Sonris bcst ‘chi’ “"1 "W" l33“"9~‘- . sary. land some of the same members Sllmmerfiidc N0. 2 States and British embassies afoul‘ of seven. First game at Winner Of Z009 I V5 Wlmlel‘ 09: NOTE: The same rules apply ‘. will be on the Turner rink this 9 PM. ere Wednesday against in. 9 gppointingtyeu, Three rink; are entered St. Eleanor's No. 1 vs. 0'Lea- proposed NATO peace-keeping isom-is, To be (_'()rnp](>[(-\d by Fob. semi-finals betiween Zone 2 and 1 with regards to to ' force for Cyprus. Both embas- lIual‘y 17. out of 3 r the Pro- I of officials. point system in both 'from Summerside. two each r.V N0- 1. 5!. El<‘an0l‘'s N0. 2 vs. 8 sics were strongly guarded by ° ° 1 2. Mlmw. },,h.bm,r ‘.5 “,m,A_ vincial B Championship to be‘series and round robin games, from Charlottetown. 0‘Lcary Sumnicrslde No _ A _ In n I n 0 e a igue. Best tour or .~i(‘\'('Il. First pllhce but there ""9 3° mm‘ lgu-iiie at .\luniagu¢-. To be coni- completed by March 31st, l964.jprotesls and fees as in C divis- land St. Eleanors and one each SATURDAY '9 A. dents. pieted by February 17. _ V V M. Winner of Zone 1 has choice of ion, from Kenslngton and Parkdale. O‘i.cary N0. 2 vs. Kcnsinnton. i It may be only 99-100ilis of a By JACK Sl.»'Ll.l\"A.\' Canadian Press Sports Editor lNNSBRUCK. Austria tCPt—»- Europeans can have their izoltl medals in skiing. specdskatina and figure skating. iii ih storybook tale or the I964 Win- ter Olympic Games bolnn: to four schnlarlvlonloniz hob=l<.=d- tiers who am: on the thresltnld ‘M. getting (‘anada its first gold medal. An unknown breed in Cana- hair-raisintz runs down the ice- coated hairpin chute at nearby 121' With the final heal ml the 1.50l-metro course scheduled to- day. the . Canadian sled piloted by tall Vic Emery Montreal holds a lead of 90-l00tbs of a second over an Austrian foursome. r 5 aggregate gob of 'l"orontu after '1‘liui'sday iiiui~iiiiig's iltird trip. l4-('l'I{\'I‘I (‘0l'I{SF. linicry, his hmilit-i‘ .lnl1Il. Pt-tor Kirby of St. .. and Doug .-\nakin of Vloniroal racerl down the 4.!l?tl—t'nnt, lil-t‘Ul‘\‘¢> course in one nllllllta, Sim cncnnrli in Tliur.'=- {la} '2 tlnrri heat. Their total time {or the three hcats was 3:10.45. F‘.i'\vin Tha- ler drove his No. 1 Austrian lteam into second place with an time of " Italy's Flugcnio .\lonti. eight- timo \\‘tll‘l{l t-l1:impimi, \\.'«is third uith .'i:ll..'i'.l. ills t‘tvllIlll‘)‘ill51ll SN‘;:io Zarrlini. rim-lmtl the best third heat time~»1:0.'l.39—to take over foiirt.li place with 3:ll.64. “Our cliances are getting bet- ter." said the six-foot, two-inch, lil.‘>—pound Emery who was being applauded in bobslod circles as 2’ ... .— 3 sec0nd—ab0ut the time it takes ,Fj"a_]_ jlwnllfr selliesf 1_ V? ,0 Snap your fingers __ hm \\lllll(‘l series .. Vtilll .01 liobsleddors who rumble down ;‘‘‘‘‘j’‘ l," l’°.‘_‘f"‘l"l”‘d l’~‘ Ala" “K, course’ A,m.N.nin‘,_.. up {hp 2, (hon-e inst ,r:.ime to \|lllllt‘l stoop walls of the I4 curves and ‘ll ~““"“5 2~ ' _ ihudding down the strai2hta- 7""? % _Q""'“‘ ‘“,"“l'-" vrayr. it means about 9:» foot for _"3’_“l‘-"WT" "“ Vlni’ ‘ ' men who reach speeds up to 00 ('"‘<‘l\i \lllP “ll? f‘r¢t=l~ \s Pou- miles an hh,,,._ nnl; Pnivnal vs Hampshire; The vanadians M" ha”, M Kim: ‘\’lili= (‘,i'i=t=k vs I‘ own at; break their ruddy neck: in a P"“'““l "-‘ H“=""l‘-‘h“r"5 Ham?‘ Crash to h,se-- ‘ah; Robin shire vs Nine Mile Creek: Nine Dixon, brakeman on Britain's,Mll° C"e°k_ V5 P°“'"al3 Ham?‘ Hwmman gold medal _ winnihgshire vs Nine Mile Creek; Pow~ ib0bS1ed_ final vs. Hampshire. To be com- With three days remaining in , l’_l9l*"l by M"‘!“'h 2~ S"“""d ““‘“' th,, 12 _ day mm,,s_ Canada-5 tinned tevam_is home team. other cltnncc for a gold mcdal z°"" 3- P'''‘'‘‘'’ ('‘“'“l-‘' lies with its unbeaten hockeay ll‘ 0'lA’3l‘.\' VS T.Vll£’ "8llP.\’ heam which meets cm{.h051o_ ‘ Best 5 out of it Tyne Valley first ivakia tonight and Russia Satur- g3m°~ l° b9 °‘"“Pl°l°d by M“‘°h day mg _ !2nd._ 1964. _ ‘ Russia won its fifth gpeedskat-‘. Winner of Zone 2 vs winner of iing gold medal and ninth gold of Z0“? 3 — B95‘ 2 0"‘ ‘ll 3 l‘“' i l 1 Mile i i l i the games Thursday, Austria's‘f5eml-finals 10 be C0mPl€‘l¢‘d by Special onmnmcement for Mutual Life policyholders In the Ercatcst driver in the world. lhusiky Christi Haas took ‘ eh , ders. that's fantastic “But the pressure is really on, ‘women's downhill skiing first-ilpionshlp with Alain Calmat of} "l don't know how we can and its on the others. too. In ‘prize and Manfred Schnelldor-;France second and 14-year-old‘ miss getting a gold medal now," fact. i guess it's worse for them , r of West Germany captured ‘Scott Allen of the United States’ said team manager Chuck Rvath- ...wc have the lead. lthe men's figure skating cham- t the language of bobsled- 63 ANNUAL REPORT 'gh|ights increased sales and benefits to Mutual Life policyholders It's been an outstanding year for the Mutual Life family of policyholders. All areas of the Company as service have expanded over the previous year. More Canadians than ever before are Mutual Life policyholders. New life insurance sales of $459 Million exceeded all previous records. The total insurance in force is now more than $4 Billion Last year Mutual laife paid out more money than ever before to living policyholders . . . in matured policies and other benefits. Dividends to policyholders increased and another substantial increase has been announced for 1964. Below are the highlights of an annual report of which all members of the Mutual Life family can be proud \ l CA’ t IN ON. TH'E5Sl-E AT SAVINGS MEN'S SKI JACKETS In quilted nylon. Plain shades. 9 .83 A CLEARING . 100 MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Plains and fancit-ss—to 6.95 2 .44 25 MEN'S TOPCOATS Reversible, woollens, tweods. etc. 4 .33 f FINAL CLEARANCE = 25 MEN'S SPORT COATS A HIGHLIGHTS FROM OUR 94TH ANl’ll.l.l3AL REPORT om: nscn MEN'S AND BOYS’ JACKETS 6 .88 9 .88 ONE BIN MEN'S SHORTS, T-SHIRTS and HOSE Reg. to 1.95. 0 FINAL CLEARING . 50 MEN'S PANTS Heavy work po.nts,, mrduroys and hoeksuode To 10.95. - etc. To I 2.95. CLEAR-ING Woollens. N ylons. Men’: Laminated and Suede JACKETS Assortment of sizes Assortment of sizes. FINAL CLICARANCE A Real Bargain for this clearance. FINAL CLEARANCE 1002 129,681,000 120,748,000 64,676.01) With 2 pairs of pants. Only 30 left. and save. Buy now FINAL CLEARANCE Tweedl. checks, plains. A real buy. ; N ew nsurance sold . . '88 3 _ . ' .... ........... ..$ ,393,000 $ 432,044,000 cHARCoAl SUITS FINAL CLEARANCE 9 j Life insurance in force .......... ........... 4,024,532,000 . 3,754,25o_ooo g Total income 1 Total payments to policyholders All ' underw I ri ti . . . To CLEAR 34-33 '""" ’°""° "9°'9"° V g and beneficiaries .. 70,495,000 WW“ P"l¢*3 *0" W5 “Ml ¢l0¢r¢n¢0- . Surplus earnings for the year.......... .......... 20,725,000 19 933 ooo 11*’ § _ Dividends to policyholders............................ 16,887,000 15.035000 5 A559“ 830.634.ooo 774,051,000 Net rate of interest earned. ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... - 5.4‘/'.% 535% Hooley's Mens Wear Store . c’MTAOW . CHARLOTTETOVIN I “E For Finest Quality Clothes 4 A . .... ___, I e ‘ .. Imnaoun aroma OPEN cnAnun'n:'.rowN srons: OPEN 5 we ' ,.., TILL 5:00 SATURDAY ‘ ABSUHANCI COMPANY OF CANADA sum ornoa: vmrnnoo. osrmnio/urnmsnm 1.. l..