PRICES onal ATLAS tires |: Esso dealers sell many lines of Atlas tires. There’s a quality Atlas tire for every type of driving and every budget. The prices on all Atlas tires have now been substantially reduced, with no reduction in quality, For instance, the “first line’’ Atlas Plycron, the Atlas tire equivalent to those installed on new cars, used to list at $24.35 (6:50 x 13, tubeless black- wall). The new suggested retail price is $18.40.Inthesameway, the “thirdline” Atlas Mile-Pak, the Atlas economy tire, used to list at $15.95 (6:70x15, tubed blackwall). The new suggested retail price is $12.95. Atlas recognizes there are other tires on the market for $9.95 or less. They are called “fourth line” - oe they are just that. The te ah lity. Atlas does not sell a fourth ine tire because it has not found a fourth line tire that will meet Atlas standards of quality and performance. The next time you're in the market for tires, see your Esso dealer first. Com- pare his Atlas quality. Compare his Atlas price. Compare his Esso-matic credit arrangements and his new Atlas guarantee. On any basis, you'll find his deal is “right with the times” —the top deal for you, all You'll find ATLAS products at new low prices .B. Jockey Wins Twice FORT ——. Bevee (CP)—Ron re old canton pod from Grand Valley, N.B., rode the winners of the first two races at Fort Erie Friday afternoon. Turcotte, who scored the first victory of his career Monday, now has registered five wins in meeti Ballydown, winner of the tirst | race, and Rosequeen, winner of the second, were saddled by trainer Gordon Huntley, with whom Turcotte has been as- sociated ever since he made his first appearance on the tracks, in the summer of 1961. Up un; til this season, he had a an exercise boy for Huntley’s pub- lic stable and he had ridden only 15 races in 1961. Ballydown and Rosequeen were heavy favorites and com- bined for the meeting’s smallest daily double of $9.70. Ballydown paid $3.70 straight and Rose- queen paid $5.60. Turcotte displayed consider- able skill and good judgment on Rosequeen as he took the filly | In hand when she was outpaced | through the first furlong. He | permitted the “ny to settle dewn before he went to the outside to win easily by five lengths. CURLING DRAW The following is the curling draw for Saturday at the ar lottetown club. This is the fina day’s curling in the closing a ed ‘‘Spiel’’ also the final Se | for the season. Skatin broomball on Monday cinbt will close out activities on the ice. 1.45 P.M. The following teams will curl. . Bill Lynch. . Paul O'Rourke. den ss only 12 races at | ng. Roepe ug So & a 9 ie a 7. Dr. MeEachera, 8. Keith Aco’ Dr. Giddings, Bobby Dowling. ora The following teams wi 6. G. Anderson, 7. D. Wonnacott, 8. M. Jenkins. H. Peters, D. O'Rourke. 7 P.M. The iaieatng teams will cur! Re F. MacMillan, The two winners of | ae: Love and MacLai 1. G. Stewart, 2, Dr. Gallant, 3. J. Burden. 4.A oe 5. B. 6. F. amen. 7. M. Kennedy. 8. B, MacGregor. Hooper, Love and MacLaine. New Zealand, Aussie Entries Favored In Race WESTBURY, N.Y. (AP) Two well-seasoned pacers from down under, Caduceus from New Zealand and Apmat from Australia» form the favored en- try for tonight's $35,000 Adio Butler Cup at Roosevelt race- way. Early odds on the pair, rac- ing for Julius Wilsker; are three Second choice in the eight- horse field for the one-mile event is Stephan Smith at seven to two. Caduceus won only four of 29 starts last year but turned in an impressive performance last week at Santa Anita, winning a mile pace in 1:57 2-5. Apmat will be making his first start this year. four days of racing. He has rid- | | in Che Guardiaw “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” SPORTS SECOND SECTION iv | A rink skipped by Wesley ardy won the Myrick’s Al- berton Limited Trophy in a competition recently complet- Charlottetown, Sat. April 14, 1962. ALBERTON RINK WINS COMPETITION ed in the Alberton Curling rink, The presentation was made by Perley Hardy, mana- ger of the Alberton _ store. Members of the rink are John | ham. Activities at the curling Clinton, Wesley Hardy, Gor- don Cotton and Bert Prid- SPECTATOR ROLE HARDER THAN PLAYING BILL MacDOUGALL ee (CP) — Bert 0im- stead gets back into harness Sunday night after a five-week harder than playing “I can’t stand to watch the | actual play,” the veteran Tor- | onto yyy Leaf left winger | said Fri Leaf om Punch Imlach has promised that the 13-year vet- | eran of the National Hockey Black Hawks meet in the third game of the best-of-seven Stan- ley Cup final. Leafs won the first | two games. “I watched most of the | games on television,’’ said Olm- ste ead. “It’s easier on the nerves. ‘In a way watching is harder a The following oa Montague High Cops Hoop Title SUMMERSIDE Monta; spectator role he says has been | League will be in the lineup at fi Chicago when Tofonto and the | think.’’ His attention as a spec- tator was devoted “more to the outcome, not too much to the individual plays.’ | It will be five weeks to the, | day pes night that Olmstead | was injured — in Chicago. He | | er acked a ren in his shoulder | when he slammed into the boards in the third period of a | game won 3-2 by Toronto. Olmstead, a tough man on the ice who can be as gentle as a | lamb away from the scene of | | battle, has been practising a. couple of weeks but is uncertain | | how he'll stand up physically in playoff action. ‘I'm as good as I can be for Waiting Game Won't Help: wild and their favorites back into the Stanley "Ou firal. Ee rT mM S eC a O re S S Punch Imlach and his charges know now tough it is to é a victory on Chicago Stadium ice. However, that should make than playing. When you're on | just practising,” he said. “But | the ice you don’t have time to | there are different conditions in| reer with Chicago in the 1949- |a game, especially in a final when it’s dog-eat-dog.”’ Olmstead, now 35, is uncer- org about his plans for next << o “p m going to sit on my trac- tor for a while in the summer and think about it,”* he said. He |operates a farm at Scepter, Sask. MISSED LAST YEAR This is the second straight year that he has missed playoff action. Last season when Leafs | were ousted in the semi - final by Detroit Red Wings, Olm- stead suffered a knee injury and was out until fifth—and last— game. FRONT By PIUS CALLAGHAN Home Ice Supremacy TORONTO Maple Leafs are still showing that home ice sup- remacy in the Stanley Cup playoffs. the semi-finals with New York Rangers, the Leafs took all pues of the games which were played on Maple Leaf Gardens They continued along the — hag when one Black eae came into town for the f Toronto w the opeser 4.1 and wen shaded the Angee gent chinentans 3.2 in the second contest, ~ wlbonrs night in the Windy City the Hawks will try their luck at keeping their home ice streak intact. In the semi-finals with Montreal Canadiens the Hawks won all — ) pane played in Chicago and managed one triumph on the the enemy, If the home ice pattern kept alive all es ‘this series, un- doubtedly Maple Leafs would be extremely happy. It would mean mee they would clinch the wor'd heekey championship in- seven es. However, Toronto would much sooner close out this best- ~ won fight in less games and they'll do their utmost to bring a decision out of Chicago. aay night the Hawks of course will be favorites to 2 ie ir first win of these Stanley Cup-finals. If this he a be right back in the thick of things and ready to grab the equalizer on Tuesday night. Chicago fans are reminding us what happened when Hawks and Canadiens met. Then the Blakemen won the first two games on home ice and proceeded to lose the next four to the reigning champions. "vonaes like Kippy Morgan, Wendall Cudmore are |trying to convince us that what happened to Montreal will hap- pen to Toronto. Thev mav be right at that althouch we fust way. These Leafs are a determined outfit at the moment will certainiy be going all out not to blow this early handsome lead, can't see it that | rink concluded with a pot luck supper Monday night. Now To Chicago AND so Sunday night the scene a to Chicage where th and woolly fans will be doing every thing possable to ane grab them all the more determined to break the jinx and come back to Toronto with either the Stanley Cup or a two-game bulge, On their showing in those two games in Toronto, we think ‘the Leafs have a great opportunity to grab a decision in Chicago, If O r ; rc G ci Mm = S U Nn c] ay ithey can, then this Stanley Cup should come back to Toronto, | Leafs richly deserved those two wins on home ice. They out. Played the Hawks in both contests and outsumped them at the same time. Thursday night their margin of one-goal would have been much greater only for spectacular goaltending by Glen | foll ar he shifted to Hall. Glen was truly sensational all evening and his work was roe Cone tene and staved — tougher than the chores handled so capably by Johnny | oined Toronto ?°Wer. eee. ce : 7 ° Leaf's forwards were backchecking beautifully and that de- His most productive seasons fence was handling itself with distinction. If these things keep up, were 1954-55 and 1955-56 with, the Leafs will be mighty hard to conquer in any rink. Canadiens when he led the Leafs Are To Blame league in assists. In the former season he had 10 goals and 48 | assists and in the latter 14 goals BLACK Hawks have not shown the pattern plays against Tor- and 56 assists. onto that they showed against Montreal. Of course, you can blame This season he had 13 goals coi of this on the Leafs who have been breaking things up on the and 23 assists. awks before they've really got or ganized. Olmtead and a_ handful of If the Hawks allow the Leafs to wander in around Glen Hall other Leafs worked out Friday eae ae ae eases: oe eer ou = e ta a i Ss e icago cause emember sump orsiey ie. e and the rest of the team skated yj arg off for a few games bet finally even the great Gump could | briefly. do it no longer. The Black Hawks’ defence will need to tighten up consider- ably in the remaining games, otherwise the Leafs could finish this series in a hurry. We called it for the Leafs in seven and we haven't changed our mind on that. However, we will not be disa ee a if the Leafs prove us wrong and end up the proceed- a seventh contest is necessary. et faba who called it for Hawks in four and five are now u the running. They were indeed brave gentlemen to make ase calls but some of them are hard to convince. Harry “The | Our was anything but Olmstead a his NHL ¢a- |50 season, In mid - season the The two losers of MacGregor, * «= Toronto Now Says Pilous h School won .. ores “BY Hig Our sympathy, Mr. Sen Interscholastic al r. venga after those two Leaf triumphs, championship of the. Island ‘at CHICAGO (AP) — Even with | “looked a little tired’’ at the end | Udvari, who called a tw Civic Auditorium in Summer-| pis Chicago Black Hawks down | Thursday night, referring to Tor- | ute penalty for Brewer's eis oieh last night ae Tignish | 2.0, a Friday 13th homecoming | onto’s 3-2 second-game triumph against Bator. by the score of 21-12. failed to dampen the a of} in Maple Leaf Gardens | “Udvari just took hockey law ie had previcusly won} coach Rudy Pilous as the Stan- | “We know what it means to be | me his own hands and made | from Souris, and Tignish had/ley Cup finals scene shifted tired, after completely wrong call,’ said | defeated Evangeline High! from Toronto to Chicago. | against Montreal, while Toronto Pilous. ‘‘Either there . a School of Abram’s Village. “Our gang now has that im- had a vane easier time against At half time the score was | portant home ice advantage and | New Y much closer, Montague ahead | it won't pay the Maple Leafs | Pilous ‘ve the Hawks a rest 11-9. to keep playing the saa rel Friday and they'll work briefly from now on,” said Pil- six tough games a have been no penalty at a it should have been a tea ue | ute penalty because the infrac- tion drew blood.’ ‘Lary Beats snBOR Ballum was high scorer | £2 aoc ee | | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | r the nners w points | §$t. Louis Cardinals whi eee | “The cup series resumes in| RETURNS WITH TEAM AFL Schedule care ea Carcuntls whines ty + cama Salen and | Chicago Stadium Sunday aight,| Murray Balfour, injured when with the fourth game also here Toronto T Brewer skated him into the Is Drawn Up defenceman Ca at the start of the game there Elmer Perry each had 4 points wesday night were 9,750 shivering fans in the ‘or aloe kine “Sure, they (the Leafs) won| boards Thursday night, was to | stands. Only a few satyed ‘o tie B the first two at Toronto—mainly | undergo another ae tae: (cp) — At end of the 15-inning, four-hour Montague High—Bob Ballum | with the waiting game — wait, | Fri ay for a_ possible Be oes eee pod and 40-minute game. 8, Steve Clarkson 7, Gerry wait, clutch, hold, wait, wait. | sion. Don nounced Friday that University Landrum's tie-breaking of Toronto Varsity Blues wil]! Single and Bill White's two-run compete in the Atlantic Bow]! double shoved across three runs le 2, Dave Balser 4, John Kane, hi. ries Balfour, who suffered a gash A. Stewart, Norm Martin, Keith ae io eee eee M the better for us. We lost the over his eye, was able to return first two against Montreal (Ca-| with the team by plane but still in the 15th to win the marathon Harry Annear, Coach, Bob nadiens) and bounced back to had a good-sized | game here Nov, 24 against the “Sqm Tignish High— Mike MacInnis take the next four.” ilous still fumed about the AFC winner. Lamas soneee: herggirnadl age 4, Elmer Perry 4, Leonard Ho-| He said he_ thought Leats | | elereding in Toronto of Frank ame, played annually Losoth ais | fete sedan: a gan 3, Leo Gaudet sat Bow sae | between the AFC champ and an Nellidan, R stages Ontario college, will be __~/sewhere in h_the NL Pitts. nia. Pedersen. W , he fourth. St. Francis Xavier 53 cy va ot eae. cm Guveraty X-men of Ania aioe on Duggan ni itt 6 U S ome | won the three previous gam BASEBALL and h Crossman, nv seca Agriculture Col. SCORES GOLD CUP P. W. C. Auditorium Mon. Apr. 16 8:15 p.m. By Popular Request ANOTHER BIG FILM NIGHT First Canadian Showing "THE 1961 KENTUCKY FUTURITY™ Plus THE HAMBLETONIAN THE LITTLE BROWN JUG and as a special attraction MY ISLAND HOME eae NO ADMISSION CHARGE collection at the door to be used for transportation of bands and pres for floats tw the Gold Cup & Seacer Parade of Ottawa and! Mehiaster Daveraity of Hamil- ton. At a meeting Friday, thelea-| ros fon a 7 a Sr oan veep ppd., e tea open bag 2 aasex Lea PRESS merican Leagt ‘aaa at snow oston at Ttinniete, ppd., 20102— 5 80 002 00— 2 41 sixth, rain Schmit; Lat- Raudolph (6) —Burnside (1-0) HR: Wsh — With Big Goals Often By JACK pg weg Canadian Press Spo The statisticians ame the fi- gures to prove that the estab- | lished stars are the leading scorers in Stanley Cup play-offs, os by is the unknowns, or “‘little me a frequently come up Ke, ‘the ‘oals. ored an overtime goal that cai 3. with eanesen, yt sae. es Editor | gave Toronto the cup in a five- | visiting Shearwater Flyers. St.| was hngton game set over Montreal Cana-| Fx, and St. Dunstan's of Charlo- | Cleveland diens. Rocket Richard scored | ttetown will play eight | (Called in th nine goals in that series, but! each the other teams n Sonne ie a oo ek aetna The X-men asked for an epee man, Allen (4). Northern Ontario fishing trip, | date te om "Ue = and Romano. W scored the cup winner. | Sieeteead. y ae (0-1) The rec ore books are full "we years before, Sid ceed Woodling (1). the exploits of Maurice f Richard, | who had played only one gam The other teams in the od St. Gordie Howe, Ted Lindsay, El-| with the Leafs in the 1948-49 are Dalhousie Tigers, St. Mary mer Lach, Bobby Bauer, Sid | NHL season, scored five goals | Huskies, Mount Allison Mount. Abel, Howie M z, Charlie | in six games. He got three of ies, University of New Bruns- Conacher, Mush March, Bill | these in the second match when | wick Red Bombers and Acadia Cook, Frank Boucher and scores Toronto won 3-1 over Detroit, Axemen. (8), McDaniel (8), J. Anderson of others. They've all won cup HILL WON NICKNAME Acadia and St. Dunstan's are (15) and Oliver. Schaffer (14); games with clutch goals but the For real heroics, though, long- new entries, up from the AFC's a con Elston (9), J little men have a in wel memoried folks go back to 1939 Junior division. , Stevens (15), Warner (15) vane oe of glo and Mel (Sudden-Death) Hill of Night games will be layed he "Taylor, Thacker (12). W ruins here on Wednesday and Friday McDaniel and SAUCER Louis 010 000 111 000 013— 8 161 Chicago 101 091 100 000 010—5 13 0 Washburn, Sadecki (7), Bauta is “iat he stars are shadowed | During the 48-game season he nichts (0-1). HRs: StL — Whit and checked closely and the un- had scored only 10 goals but Chi—Brock (1). knowns, practically ignored, he went wild against New York REMEMBER WHEN |New York 0201000003 91 step in to break up the games. Rangers in the semi - finals, By THE CANADIAN PRESS Detroit 900 002 30x— 5 71 — JOINS CLUB scoring three overtime goals. In °Y A : Staltoré, Acreye (7), Coates Fleming, a oe ees or seventh and deciding game) REMEMBER WHEN .. . : Blache Hawk who had scored of this series his goal after 48 Montreal Canadiens be | (7) and Howard; Lary, Bunning only four times in 66 National | satamies of overtime sent Bruins ame the first hockey club | (8 ac et hen “— my Hockey League games in the into the final against Toronto, ‘© win the Stanley Cup five une. Widiimed:.a 1960-61 season, did it last year | which they won in four straight.| times in succession when - . National League they beat Maple Leafs 40 620 001 010 4 81 against Detroit Red ic part of the Hill| at Toronto two years azo Wings. ironic goal in the final | “story was that Lester Patrick | game that tied tied the score at 1-1. /of Rangers had turned him| tonight. Canadiens had |New York 000011 010—3 96 It set the Hawks on fire and down years before because he| walked over Chicago Black | mune demu. in San then they went on from there to win figured the five-foot-10 175-poun-| Hawks in four straight SS; vones, Motor » Davi cred |der from Glenboro, Man. wes | semi-final games and they | ault (8) and Ginsberg. W—Stur- polished off Toronto in four games in the final. an ane Dank cae tae “too small.” divant (14). L—Jones (0-1) HR: Gilbert whose two-| “I don’t think he'd be able. Yk—Thomas oo. | Houston Saaananeah etiech, wemmey 100 iad Ge cum of 0 toll von. 600 100 0012 70 was enough to pull New York) son's play and, even if he éid, OLD CHURCH | Phila 010 001 Oix— 3 415 Rangers even with Toronto| he wouldn't have enough! Farrell, Tiefenauer (7) and Maple Leafs after four games of | strength to catry over for the| The oldest Protestant church Smith: Hamilton and Dairym- their best-of-seven serni-finz!. post - season playoff se | in Ontario, Her Majesty's Cha- ple. W —- Hamilton (10). L— In 1951, defenceman Bill Ba- Patrick was quoted as | pel to the Mohawk, was built Farrell (0-1), never @ proiifie scores, \j im 1785 at Brantiord. { zales (1), pees i | Angeles HR: ———d Conds Whip Cubs: Yankees burgh spoiled New York Mets’ home debut by beating them 4-3, As Dizzy Dean might have said, there was a lot of sludding—rain fell most of the time, Tom Sturdivant who pitched seven innings was the winner and Sherman Jones took the loss. Mets’ Frank Thomas knocked the ball out of the premises that was deserted by New York Giants in 1957, LARY DOES IT AGEIN In the American at Detroit Frank Lary ran his lifetime rec- ord against Yankees to 28-10 as ’ sat through 36-degree temperature, rain and snow to see Tigers come from behind a 3-0 lead in the first three innings. They had their big inning in the seventh, the same inning Yankees’ home run king Roger Maris had to duck a pop bottle. He walked to the dugout and briefly refused to return to the field. He got a royal booing when he did. Tere was snow at Cleveland, too, and Washington Senators beat Indians 5-2 in a game that was called in the sixth. Boston at Baltimore and Les at Minnesota were rained and snowed out in the American. Chicago was to play at Kansas City at night while in the National at night Houston was at Philadelphia, Milwaukee at Los Angeles and Cincinnati at San Aarennns AN 53 HF ; Canuck To Get _ im. — Anderson Chance In ‘500’ INDIANAPOLIS (CP) — Ed a. of Victoria is to a ven a chance to become of the two Canadians to om in the famed SS ee a Bob Sowle, chief mecha the Leader Card operators of a car Bob Wilkie of Milwaukee, said Friday Kostenuk, @ eo driver for years, will given the chance This does not mean that Kos- here say that sev drivers often try for the satte ear if Kostnuk is selected he will be driving a car In whith Roger Ward year's 500. The ca® was also on in a 100-mile race last or,