,,,,,....... .-gar -41-4,».-via»?-.. ,,..._.---«.u -y.-_-. T-_,~_,.. . A. ,,,,,,.,_, , BEATING OU..T INILD THROW fence of the Masters title -today ' it on the final round. - his remarkably consistent play on Doug Ford Sta of professional golf, starts his de. against an international field which includes top players of five continents. " Ford won’t be entirely forgotten as long as there are fans around to recall his whirlwind finish last year when he holed out from 3 “jail! at the 72nd hole for a win- ning ‘final round of 66. ’ ‘But so far this year only Doug himself and possibly a few others have paid much attention to the P_°5S‘lJb11i'ty of his becoming the first player ever to win the Masters two years in succession. Ford picks himself to win again. Ken Venturi, the brash young man from San Francisco, is the favorite. He nearly took the tour- nament two years a u’gen he still was an amateur, but blew Winning the Masters has been Ventu-ri’s biggest objective and the winter tour indicates this may be his year. He has won three pafle C'ruardi2nT]1m-_' 3‘ y,-,_ -. rts Defence about 90 players who fill the rigid and reduced qualifying stand- ards. After 101 players teed off ,- for the opening round lastyear, the Qualifying regulations were tightened a bit to keep the size 2 of the tou.rnament in hand. ‘As always, the field includes _ virtually all past winners of the ‘ Masters, most of the National Open and amateur champions of the last 10 years or so a-nd the leading players on the pro circuit. The foreign list, larger and ‘ stronger than usual, is headed Japanese stars Torakichi Naka- ' mura and Koichi Ononi whose amazing putting and consistently low scores have made them the No. 1 attraction during practice rounds. It also takes in three Ca- ’ nadians. four Australians and star players from South Africa, Belgium and France. No foreign player has won the Masters since its inception in 1934. _ The Canadians are Toronto's Al Balding, Stan Leonard from Vancouver and Lachute, Que., I v /4 - MAPLE LEAF I TORE H I \ Ti-us WEEKEND Of Masters Golf Title Today 3 \ °"EN - . THURSDAY and .«:il?“"i“;’2z-.?i;..é.‘..::..;. “.325 ..3’“°..19::.:‘3.:S‘:::.r*“..:.:‘.::lt7 SATURDAY 8:30 am. to 9:30 pm. CLOSED GOOD FRIDAY SHOW BEEF Yes we will give you price saving bu.‘/S 0“ E35191‘ 399‘: P111" I h d t th Ch ‘I tt t Fat Stock Show. Cut right and grieliseed right is al:I}a(ys.eI?IOmADVANCE ON REG. PRICES. RUMP ROAST . . . lb. 59¢ RIB ROAST‘. . . . lb. 59¢ SHOULDER ROAST lb. 55¢ =.; '3 ix -.-.4» v -25 -.4 ~... _.... .-,~=-.¢ W .v‘.¢r-»\- 7 v- <£ce‘i:ndtot’ii‘i,'iiia=ments and finished god Nick Weslock of Windsor, _ C I-B‘ LARGE JUICE ce. .. ' , WEST PALM BEACH, Fl-a.. — ios first baseman lunges toward Connie Mack Field. Final score, ~ ' A‘. I . 2 mm‘ § Igeno Begtoia, third baserfnasi: fir: IzI1§:\(;tTtI(1)r\l£1I0(II)eI;}’in'LI;né'éI0nI()i8§;el- Athletics 6, Detroit 4. S U ’ 2 e mi igers crosses ir V _ . _ - - : . — ~ 1 V ~ KING ~ ; , vie Power, Kansas City Athlet- ning of recent exhibition game at (AP Wirephoto) . P - . MAl_’LE LEAF WHOLE QR HALF 000 . 5 9 1%. ~ - o ' LBS. 3 » . of Football Compemmns Tenclersweet HAMS, lb. 59: APPLES c - ‘ speci « eommi ec ma cear e - . . _ g Cana Tens la 9 Breather A “-1 it or «mm M 1 mm wsn S‘”‘”“ST . ' . . Dalhousie Council of students has that Dalhousie is not interested MAPLE LEAF SKINLESS 6 FOR _ j ' recommended that Dalhousie con- in pursumig a Canadian c'hampi- ' f f F ° sider the entry of a junior team onship and would -not do so if _ 9 o 9 9 o 0 LARGE CRISP I ‘ into an Intercollegiate Football the opportunity presented itself, ' ‘ . e a S League while retaining its but the Council favours returns ' 2 FOR j V ~ senior squad in the l*£oe\;a to Purdy Cup play with scheduI— v‘ SUPERIOR PURE PORK ‘ ‘ MONTREAL (CP) — Maurice at least until next Tut-o6 If lard St. Laurent, recovering from ml’ S’°’“°’ F°°”"‘" - ' ‘*1 my °“‘ ma'“°h°5.- 3 FRESH WASHED : (Rocket) Richard and company the semi-final goes the seven- a fractured cheek-bone, got into 5,22’ :3: "0? °,§,,'.f.’,,'",,'§,§;f,l,,fel11l’,',‘, ,,»,‘:§,’f,‘f.,'§§‘,f,t,S":f‘,,f,,S"§,“,’,,3“ffi:dD;‘f§§,§’;j 9 9 9 e 5 C N CELLO 7 came home early Wednesday «game limit, the final will open the fourth game. We commmee set up to invest} ‘ie Councm Should‘ make every _ ‘ BAG C . i_iig2ht_ for a breather before m_ov- here Thursday, April 10. Meanwhile, Rocket Ricliard’s gm, me Da1.h0uSie“F-oofibajj N31. effort L0 have introduced M0 = W WASHED , :2 ing into _the Stanley Cup final Managing director Frank Selke, feats were still the talk of Msont- mm generailzly and she ,posg,1b1my league myes “he fixing of 8 time _ FRESH CHILLED NE against either Boston Bruins or whoflew back Det«noint‘ahead real hockey ‘fans. of the “Marion of an my-,9,-C01. before which no beam could be_ C W 2 LBs_ N:,Y1eY3:::ez1:'a:)11ieI;;mket was,fihe ;g1:hEt_;g'“l:'r5md tlgiégiéswlg ‘if: He has been in 13 playiollf ser— iegiaite league. News of the.fortn— gin physical training and a sys- : e 0 c. o C y N,-.. ‘.14.: I flour «straight games. J the second of the four games in big man Tuesday night -- as he has been in many a series -- in Montreal Canadiens’ 4-3 win over Detroit Red Wings. Canadiens swept the ‘best-of-seven [series in The Rockets three - goal per- -formance was the clincher. It was which he has supplied the win- ning goal. In the opener in Mont- real, an 8-1 runaway, Richard scored the first two. With the New AWL Boston ser- ies tied 2-2, Canadiens will rest SPORT ECHOES Buckingham _ The Cape Breton All-Stars have eliminated the B u c kin g h a m Beavers and will now tackle those star-studded Hull—Canadien Juniors. We are particularly in-3 terested in the Cape Breton team because the Island representative in the All-Stars is Eustace Ree- ves, a Summerside boy, who has been pulling his weight according to reports. Doug Polley, an Amherst Rambler whom we had occasion to admire and fear this past winter, is the New Bruns- wick contribution to the All-Stars. Reeves is rugged and has a blistering shot. With some high- grade coaching he might go up pretty high on the ladder of hoc- key achievement. The Summer- side Aces certainly missed him when a back injury sidelined him this spring for most of the im- portant play-off games. The Lot 16 Rangers are hotter C. B. AII-Stars Eliminate ‘sem -finals cover and get back into condition. REST WILL HELP “We should hit the finals’ in the best shape we have been for months,” sa-id Selke, recalling the long strnig of injuries that dog- ged the team throughout the reg- ular National Hockey League sea- son. Selke said defenceman Tom Johnson skated in Detroit Tues- day and was surprised -to find his -injured knee in such good condit- ion. Johnson saw no action against the Red Wings. Defenceman Dol- Beavers eis, during which Canadiens won 72 games. He scored the winning goal in 16 of these 2 games, five of which went into sudden-death overtime. He missed three play- ofifs -series-—in 1942, when he was injured; in 1948 when Canadiens didn’vt qualify for post-season play, and in 1955 when he was under suspension for a late-season out- burst in Boston. Richard now has played in 115 playoff games, one short of the record. He has scored 77 goals and 40 assists for a total of 1.17 points. tions. Our Paperweights are down 1-0, and blinking red lights is a very tough chore for these smallest of all puck manipula- tors, our bantams are down 4-1 and our midgets 3-1. The Pee- Wees of the two centres fought to a 2-all draw. If the hockey fans of Summerside would hand out_a than overprbof tamale this spring. They knocked off all op-y ponents in the Island Intermed- iate “C” bracket, which was not; too urprising. When they trip- ped he Freetown Royals in the of the Southshore league, this did cause some eye- brow lifting on the part of hoc- key fans. Now they’ve beateni those rampaging Albany St. Patsl in the first game of the finals. It’ seems when “the Campbells are comin’ ” opposing defencemen had better watch out, and it makes matters even worse if they’ve got the Strongmans and the Gorrills and the Birches with them. Our small fry hockey players of the minor divisions, with the little encouragement by attend- ing the return games at Civic Stadium tonight, who, knows, maybe even the under-dogs would get in a few telling iiips a_t the top-dogs and roll ‘cm into the dust. _ Charlottetown’s Parkdale Fly- ers ‘who made our intermediate FL Aces look the second team of the Sake Brook Shovel-Sliots were beaten in two straight games by the St». Basile Aces in New Bruns- wick, thereby losing the N.B.- P.E.I. Intermediate crown. It brings to mind the series a few years back between our Summer- .side Aces and the Aces of St. Basile played also in the latter’: rink. Our Aces lost in two straight games, and reported that in their opinion St. Basile exception of Lippy Gaudet’s Pee . could be‘at the Stanley Sup hold- Wees, are all under-dogs in theirlers in St. Basile rink. We'd like home and 1101'“? Clashes Wlth ‘.to see a final series sometime Charlottetown minor aggrega- SPORTS FRONT By PIUS CALLAGHAN Boston Bruins and New York Rangers renew their Stanley Cup semi-fin-al tonight at Boston in a game that will give the winner a terrific’ series advantage. Before Rangers deadlocked the series Tuesday we had penned in this column that Bruins look- ed like certain winners.’ No sooner had we done so than the New Yorkers did a complete turnabout and put the best of seven series on a 2-2 basis. Listening to the hot-stovers be- tween periods of the Detroit - Montreal game, we, got some comfort in learning that many hockey experts had figured Ran- gers washed up after Saturday’s 5-0 blanking. They, too, were of the opinion that the going would be too rugged for Bathgate and Company. ' However I-I-andy Andy appar- ently had not heard that Rang- ers were finished. He tore back T}leSday with two goals and led his club to a 5-2 win. Rangers are not out of the woods by any means. We still pick the Bruins to meet Canadiens in the finals. But Rangers have shown they can bounce back. And that bounce could be suffiicient to sideline the Bostonians. Remember Rangers have been a mighty fine road club all sea- son long. POWER MACHINE While Rangers and Bruins are hammering each other into sub- mission, the mighty Canadiens will be resting up for the semi- final winner. Unless the Canucks go into a terrific slump, they should emerge again as Stanley Cup champions. Indeed, no one need astéllhle the air of a prophet to make such a prediction. Cana- diens‘ record over the 70-game schedule. plus their quick dis- posal of Detroit Red Wings. should establish them as over- whelming favorites. ’ ~Sometimes. however. these un- derdog clubs fail to read the sports pages and are not aware that they are given no chance to emerge victorious. Such goings- on have often led to some start- ling upsets. - History can repeat. The injury to New York Yan- kee catcher Yogi Berra, believed at first “to be only a slight one, may keep him out of the season's opener. ‘ The split between the third and fourth fingers of the right hand, caused by a foul tip in Monday’s game against Los Angeles, re- quired two stitches Tuesday. The hand will remain bandages for about 10 days. The Yankees open in Boston, Tuesday, April 15. with this club on the road for I change. MINOR HOCKEIY Four City minor hockey teams - will make the trip to Summer- side tonight fortthe second games in their playoff series for the Prince Edward Island Titles. All teams will leave W. G. Bar- bourls showrooms as follows: Royalty Bears--5:15, Queen Char- lotte Lions--5:30, Q. C. H. S. Bantams--5:45, Abbie Midgets- 6:15. All players are requested to be a Barbour‘s' on time. Challenger For Cup Launched SANDBANK, Scotland (Reu- tersl—-Sceptre, a new 12-metre yacht which will represent Brit- ain against’ the United States in the America Cup race in Septem- ber, was launched Wednesday. I ' Timely suggestion_if you need money! I Call on Canada's leading consumer finance company ation dd a «four university Canad- ian rfootball club was announced recently by the Maritime Inter- collegiate Athletic Union with the .-poossibility of several additional entries. - , - FINANCIAL LOSS Decision to set up the commit- tee also came at a time when Dalhousie suiifered its first sea- sonal financial loss — the first in ‘many years, and at the time when ‘all Maritime universities has converted to Canadian foot- ball. In recommending that the Dalhousie Council of Students continue to enter a team in the NSFL .as long as fair final ar- rangemen-ts -could be obtained, the committee recommended fur- ther, thait Dalhousie would never leave the senior Provincial league especially not for the sake of fiomiing -an intercollegiate league. The final arrnagements, which worked detrimental to Dalhousie ihterest-s last season, has been checked and the committee was of the opinion that the agree- ment for 1958 would probably prove to be the best Dalhousie has ever received -from the. NS PURDY CUP The Counc.il was also urged by the special committee composed tem of imposing such a rule. FOR THE FUTURE While the committee felt thrl‘ an intercollegiate league was not possible at this time moreover, 5 it was of the opinion that one would not be -feasible -for at least -*- fiive years and probably longer, it nevertheless, recommended that further, Councils make capital expenditures of the next few years to promote junior var sity football. .. At the recent MIAU conference in Sackville, .N.B, four universi- " ties. St. Thomas, the University of New Brunswick, St. Dunstan’s, and Mount Allison University an- nounced themselves as definite starters in an inter-collegiate Can- adian football league with both Acadia University and St. Mary’s Universtiy expressing definite interest. The two university mem bers of the powerful Nova Scotia Football League, Dalhousie and I St. Francis Xavier, stated at thv.'- ,- time that they would remain in the present senior Provincial league ‘ 7 9 TOMATO & VEGETABLE CLARK’S SOUP 6 tins 63c : Trade Players . ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) St. Louis Cardinals traded out- fielder Jim King Wednesday to regain catcher Ray -Katt from of Council members George Tra- vis and Kemipt-on‘ Hayes, Halifax, San Francisco Giants. CAMPAIGN Association with regard ment without delay, to— P'ROG-RESSIVE CONSERVATIVE FEDERAL ELECTION , I Would all firms having accounts outstanding with the Queens County Progressive Conservative election campaign, kindly submit cure P. 0. Accounts .to the recent Federal same for pay- Box 336 Charlottetown. P. E. I. I THANK ‘YOU Oueens County Progressive Conservative Association Any time of day is a good time to talk to the friendly people at HFC about your money problems. Advice is sound and helpful. Loans are prompt and private. Borrow up to $1,000 with repayment terms you choose. I Modern money service backed by 80 years of experience HOUSEHOLD FINANCE 6»wr««»—»¢6.-»««z«» 5 II7 Queen Street. . . . . . . . . . . . Telephone 7395 ISO Great George Shed . . . . . . . . Telephone 8517 CHARLOTTETOWN TO THE LIBERALS OF QUEEN'S With the deepest sense of humble pride ap- preciate the honour of over seven thousand friends in Queens County who voted for me. To the Liberal committees and workers I ex- tend my warmest thanks; to the new Young Lib- eral organizations my praise and best wishes for the future; and to Ladies Liberal Clubs myis1n- cere appreciation. ‘ Do not be downhearted. Remember the years when we had it all our own way. Recall, for ex- ample, the 30-0 in 1935: never in the history of Parliamentary institutions has the Conservative or any other Party equalled the Liberal Record. The principles of Lll)€l‘.'r.lllSl’Il have not been defeated. Let us stand by those principles, secure in the knowledge that we shall soon again see them emerge triumphant. J. O. C. CAMPBELL CHCKENS Tum EYS CANDY EASTER EGGS . . lb. 39: SQXEPAK 2 33¢ TSILERTISSOAP 4 cakes 35¢ 2 I “..‘fg_ 25c MIX, . 2. 2 pkgs. 25c QAMPBELLS "7," ‘ "1-'£’S I<‘II’.’EST QUALITY. T(ETcHup - 2 45c MINCE MEAT 43c ' . BARBOUR’S MARTELLO ‘LB’ c AEROWAX RLOINSTEAK Rindless BACON LARGE GRADE “A” NEW YORK DRESSED, LB. FULL FLAVOR . OR T. BONE EASTER QUALITY .LB. EMPIRE BRAND PICTURE PACK LB. GRADE “A” CAPONS LB. COOKIE TIN FLUFFO 3 lbs. 85¢ BALLET——ASSORTED COLORS TOILET TISSUE , 2 rolls 25¢ REG‘. $1.49 VALUE BIGGEST SAVINGS IN TOWN 93:.- NESCAFE GROVES FINE QUALITY PEACHES 6 ‘i~u‘3§” $1.00 EASTERN BAKERIES HOT CROSS BUNS oloz. 45c MOONKIST ORANGEJUICE 2 33¢ COFNAHLAISCES 2 49¢ FLTXNUT BUTTER 29¢ PERFECTION ICE CREAM EASTER BRICK EACH, 29c INSTANT COFFEE I.I9 wirii §Ig£U1éLAV0R 5 oz_ jar PALM—SWEET MIXED ‘LARGE 1 PICKLES . . 49c McCAIN’S-—-FREE POTATO JPATTIES FROZEN PEAS 2 PW 49: FROZEN 33c BLUEBERRIES TUB WESTON’S SODAS BISCUITS , v‘x?r;I ‘ 33¢ éiGiénSoT«. IN cmroN%:::E Doll 47‘ PEERLESS-—ORANGE & LIME OR GINGER ALE 2 LARGE BOT. 35c ‘