Rangers Shut Out S'Side_ To Take 2-1 Series Lead | SUMMERSIDE A hard | breakaway opportunity. T he-MacDonald’* 15.41, MacDonald etown, Ke 16.44; 5. Charlot- skating band of Charlottetown puck went to the corner where a 19.49. : Kennedy (Chandler, '|hockey players alias the Rogers Legion player tried to freeze it Second Period — 1. ca | MocIbemesdh 18.06; 6. Ch'town— _.|Rangers, whipped Summerside but Irwin dug it out wheeled in: town, MacDonald 8,07. .Penalties |MacKenaie (Brown )19.07. Pen- + |Junior Legionnaires 6.0 as they front of the net and jammed a ~- 10.51, Richards 12.23, Irwin |alties — Muttart §.24, Gallant + |invaded Civic Stadium here last low shot under the screened '13.30, Muttart 13,30, MacDonald, 7.15,. MacDonald 7,15, Gallant ‘|night and took a 2-1 lead in their | Woodcock. Joey Brown showed |Gallant 19.51. p 11.95, Arsenault 15.00, peawe The Guandian, Charlottetown, Tues., March 1, 1966. 7 Capture Trio By NORMAN MacDONALD | son, it two straight in their best of | Matheson’s Elmer Wayne, has scored a new kind nine series with Borden Na- | of ‘hat trick’’, and we*doubt if tionals, and the Nats, to live | best. of five series for the PEI his heels to the Summerside club Third Period — 2, Charlotte- 16.30, Gallant 1750, MacDonald the feat has been duplicated in up to our expectations, must Junior championship. game six minutes later as he broke town — Irwin 6.09; 3. Charlotte- - the Maritimes. When attending win five out of the uext seven | [Was a rugged one with 4 total away and forced the puck be- town — Brown (Taylor) 12.44; |18.28, Smith 19.90, Perry, Areen- Charlottetown games. This is a pretty tall — order, but not too tall if the Borden team can ice a full team for the rest of the series, : of 30 penalties being assessed. '| -Jamie Kennedy was. the big ;|marksmen for the locals with {|two goals but was followed by which ‘is a bit doubtful. They - _jJqhn Irwin, Lincoln MacKenzie, were short two key players ~ ; ry : ae : ' oes 4 Joey Brown and Ceci] Mac- when Aces; full -trength, nip- , a ‘ a 3 | Donald. ped them 3-2 in Summerside ai - i a *:|. The first period proved to be | Friday night. Gerald Cut- a rough close checking and cliffe,-being married on Satur- {penalty stubbed affair as a total | day, naturally missed Fri- © day’s hockey match, and . Freddie DesRaches was _ab- sent for some other reason. Summerside High, Wayne skip- a foursome that won the P.E.I. Schoolboy Curling Cham- pionship. Next year Wayne mov- ed to Prince of Wales College, and there he’ skipped a team which won the P.E.I. title again. This winter Wayne is attending Acadia University, and Mon- day's. Guardian reported that he skipped the Acadia rink which had won the Maritime Intercol- uraegiate Championship. A The Pope Motors. “Aces made Charlie In The “Sin Bin” ' The Frank Driscoll — Dar- ryl Doyle — Coke Grady line led the big production line of | Greg Deighan, Willie Gallant, and Dave MacLeod for the second game in a row, but | those two lines are both po- tent forces, matching. the twe Borden lines which have now been broken up by absentee. ae Other factors which might leave us with a face with a magenta shade are. the | nS addition of Nance Harris to" the defence, and the sensa- tween Woodcock and the post on 4 the near side. . Jamie Kennedy then added what was perhaps the prettiest goal of the night exactly three ‘minutes later after he had miss- ed a breakaway effort shortly before when he was dragged down by a zealous defenceman. , He broke away again and deked the Legion ' goalie mse going down in a heap. Almost too late he flipped the puck into the up- per left hand corner. Kennedy came right back with j/his second of the evening as he ‘capitolized on a pretty passitiz play from Chandler to give the cage and Rangers a 5-0 lead and Lincoln | rece in one Fae coll ag it | MacKenzie gave the locals an was the locals who were on the | even half dozen as he banged receiving end and at most of the | the puck past Woodcock with calls as they took a total of six| less than a minute Temaining, of the ten. Woodcock’ was sen- | SUMMARY sational.in the first period and | First Period —.No_ scoring. throughout the game, as he rob-| Penalties:. Muttart, Brown 2.53, bed Charlottetown on a number Arsenault 6.09, Arsenault 7.04, Af gooosions. MacDonald 8.10, Foley 8.46, Ri- The second period was played j along: the the same tae line except that chards 12.02, ‘Chandler 11.39, pened the scoring | : nat sibel were fewer pen- es. “With” -Charlottetown™ jhard Cecil MacDonald. — Kennedy 'ault, 19.45. Baseball Case ls Underway By MIKE RATHET \tually will put before the court MILWAUKEE (AP)—Baseball jits contention that the. National went on trial Monday—for about veague | has violated antitrust 10 minutes—before the case be- jlaws by moving the Braves to ing heard by Circuit Judge ‘Atlanta from Milwaukee. mer. W. Roller was recessed f behind - the - scenes legal xin \SOUGHT AMENDMENT | The first official move was an cues. Meee I eee ‘| attempt by baseball's counsel to The case, which likely will |@mend its answers to the state's test the entire structure of base- Complaint by getting before the ball, began before a packed court rulings by Georgia and ‘courtroom holding ebout 150 on- | Texas Judges, who have ordered lookers, a battery of 17 legal ex- i Braves to play the 1966 sea- son in Atlanta, |perts - a jury box filled with | Willard S. 7 ial counsel for the state, ob The — of Wisconsin cause the cue? t. not ao ' EF (Olas Rake Oe Ee had ok _HUNTER’S CORNER |e Rar a eh nt make a ruling later. : ‘teams ed- of ten infractions were handed *|out by the referee Don Whelan. i‘ As a result, neither of the teams |played a great deal of time with | “| six men on the ice and plays) were not finished off. The Legionnaires were robbed of a goal at the six minute mark | by Barry Ellis in the Rangers . LOOK OVER THE GIANTS oe | first day of spring training at ’ Charlie Sark was playing, and his presence on defence tends to keep the Aces forwards from- barging over. that blueline too recklessly, but Charlie got five penalties, amounting to fifteen minutes in the sin bin. The Aces scored once when he was off, and he got a penalty in the final two minutes of the game when .. the Nationals were making their ” Jast ditch effort to even up the score. After getting four con- secutive ‘hat tricks’ at Civie _... Stadium Donnie’ Mac Willi; “nad to settle for two goals Cahait Willie Mays pnd the San Manager Herman Franks, of watch the team workout on sot Francisco Giants, the aay. Grande, ay Ariz., yester- vincial Legion Spiel . To Commence Today: > this time.” day hight,-the only two which the- visitors scored: A red hot machine, this boy. Chandler A big 265 pound goliath named | -Chandler had too much heft for | our_ strong Gerry Smith at Char- | lottetown on Sunday, and Smith | was out-thumped every time the two met. But this couldn’t have | been the. sole reason for that 10-4 drubbing which the Legion-. Lancers Team tional work of Gerard Smith in the Ace net. vs Smith naires received at the hands of | {Rogers Rangers. Cecil MacDon- | iald of the cogs in the Ranger. ma- chine which will be hard to! ‘throw monkey wrenches into as ithe season progresses. Set For Action — WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)—Coach _ Bob Samaras expressed : dence Monday as he prepared | isit to the ate Att | ers for their fourth’ Canadian Intercoll letic _ Union ll Friday and Saturd at Cal- gary. ‘It makes no_differente » to me | which téam we play round,” Samaras said ~ after Lancers wrapped up their fourth: ; eonsecutive Ontario-Quebec tercollegiate- Athletic - Associa=+} tion championship with a 101-71) sudden-death -victory over Wa-| terloo University Warriors. “We pretty well know the pede ef play we can expect from Acadia, Carleton, Waterloo Lu- theran and Alberta. This is a real enthusiastic bunch of kids. . They did everything_I asked: ef them. I think we've got a good -chance. to..go..all. the way. bs one O-QIAA opponent, Only University — of Western. .Ontario- Mustangs, limited Lancers’ win- ging margin to emt than 22 WILT HONORED phy which he received in re- jused .big ends to defeat Mrs cognition for his all time scor- | Pike of Newfoundlandi Wilt Chamberlain is dwarf- ed y an eight “foot high tro- Ang record of 20,088 points, points—a 95-80 score at London, | |Feb. 25. During the last ee aaa aoe lost two jin ‘O-QIAA play. It pos vanced to the national finals 11963 and [964 and losing at Hal- | | ifax in 1965. _In_ the _1963 Canadian: final, “first | Lancers nipped Acadia Univer" isity Axemen, 53-50. The follow- ling year, they socked University | lof British Columbia Thunder- ‘birds, 95-70: Oné-year:.ago, they lreached the title round against ‘Acadia and bowed to the Axe- 'men in overtime 91-87. “Naturally, we'd like to get another crack at Acadia,” Sa- maras. said Monday. “We've had pretty good luck against them the past three years: They had -to-g0- into- -overtime to beat us last season.” i ‘Dancers’ 11-play-roster....fea- tures‘ six Canadians and five Americans. Only two of the Americans, forward Marty Kwi- re and centre Bob Na- ivetta, are Teguiars. ae Both are from Detroit: “~~~ Kwiatkowski recently clinched the..O-QIAA’s. individual scoring championship with 230 points in 10 games. | | FE of Kenora, Ont., t : ™ sae aa a died tee + ie j a. 3 Ls | oe | | \ ‘entry, Dr. Temple ‘Hooper; “also ™ iof Grand Falls, Nfld., * |Rene Show of Halifax beat Shir- three = ley Pilson of Bathurst, N.B.. 11-'the ninth to decide the see- “saw contest By DOUG BELL — Two of half a dozen favorites meet today in the opening’ 10 o'clock draw for the Provincial Legion Title and the Moosehead trophy. The winner of the week- long bonspiel will represent Prince Edward Island in = |Kamloops, British Columbia. is at’ the . Charlottetown j Curling Club. Athol Robertson’ the defending jchampion from Montague, meets |the highly rated Bill “‘Pud” Beer foursome from the Belvedere Winter Club. Another strong out of Belvedere and lead_stone from Art Burke's Brier “entry, — : “Art Love from the « host clu | Minor Teams Play Today The semi-finals in ‘the a Minor Hockey League’s finals |each time, winning at home in Wee division will be a two oo ' total -goal play-off. Bg following is today's sche. | of _fames at St. Dunstan's |_ aye 8.00 p.m. Rangers vs Wi 9.00 Bruins vs: Hawks. saa Causeway Races | Go Wednesday Ice conditions are good at the North River Causeway and the | following are the entries for | Wédnesday's races: Class A Trot and Pace — Miles Hal, Audrey's Pride, Rudy | Frisco, Hilda’s Best, Terry's Hal-and- Bob Budlonz. Class C Trot: and Pace—Lucky Frisco, Dance Party, Murry’s Chief, Thunder Gir, Photo Chief, Sprucy Chief, MacNeills Best_and. o and. Valery’s.. Sinthsinsease “Class B Trot and Pace — Brown Budlong, Yankie Dollar, White Choice, Flury Lark, Im- perial Hal, Fluid Drive, McGee, wits Joker. Class Trop and Pace — Jolly Day, Evening Date, Royal Feather, True Rennels, Try ping Get Lenir, Barb C. Silent Post time is 2:15 p.m. The North River club plans to the D.K: MacLeod Memor- ial Invitational Pace on Satur- day, March 5th. Anyone interest- ed in entering the race must get in touch with the race secretary by. Wednesgay. at Eb0 p.m. | VANCOUVER (CP)—The Ha- vorites—scored ast-end vietor- | of the Canadian women's _curl- | ing” championship : Defending champion “Mrs. Coo edged Nicole Janelle Alfred. Que., only extra-end contest. In other matches, June Shaw _|Kay Hoare of P.E.1.; 10-7; 10: The second round ‘of the round-robin tournament was to | Scotia; Saskatchewan against | [New Brunswick: Ontario meet- |P.E.1. = 620-010 110 0- 5 fing Alberta; British“ Columbia Ontario 001 101 003 3— 9 |playing: Manitoba: and Prince Edward Island against New- Sask. FM) 204 OT O10 foundland. Nfld. 010 030 020 1— 7 The Saskatchewan rink of - ’ Mrs. MacNevin, Fay Coben, NB 300 010 300 3—10 Florence Hill and Avis Carr, Nova Scotia Mrs. “Mani- ‘behind a 53 deficit after eight | “represented” this” yéar by ‘ends against Prince Eden Joyce Beek of Dauphin, fell 6-5 |land. 7 Mrs. Lee's.trim Edmonton |...Mrs._Shaw scored three on.the.. land. B. MacLaren with one. ra n won 95 over | Pat Summerside, |surier, of Halifax defeated Mrs. Barbara MacNevin of|Pilson of New Brunswick by : Z |Delisle, Sask., defeated’ Vi Pike | wiping out a 7-6 deficit atter people with incomes more than | and | seven ,ends. Mrs. Snow scored ' start at 8 p.m. PST (ll p.m. Manitoba \EST) with Quebec versus Nova | Alberta j iB.C.” MacNevin, scored three | Quebea Pete “Sinclair, games - maker for the Prince Edward Island Curling Association meets the former winner Danny O'Rourke of Charlottetown. Other strong entries should be Art Ballem of the city and Bert Hunter from Summerside. Today there will be three draws, at .10:00,.2:00- and 8:00. The annual Legion banquet will bé held at 6:15 at the Charlotte- town Legion Home in Pownal Street, with the Moosehead re- ception beginning at 5:45. All games in this competition will be 12 ends. The official in charge of the week's curling will be Andy Bagnall. Attending the Legion curler’s banquet will be special guests which will include: Art Burke’s MacDonald Brier team of Arnold — | | | Llewellyn, Ralph ‘Manning and Dr. Temple Hooper. Two mem- bers of the winning Island Mixed Championships, Doug Bell, and Bill MacGregor, will also be attending. The general publie is invited to come and watch this import- ant Provincial Bonspiel which usually produces the second best curling event on the Island. The upstairs viewing area is intend- ed for the people under 21 years of age. Moosehead representatives Ken Sterne, Don Beatteay, and Al Ferguson are expected to be on hand today or tomorrow, and for the remainder of the week. They will make the :presentat- ion of trophy and — at the’ end of the spiel, which should be Saturday afternoon. loose puck in: front.of. the overt. worked Woodcock and blasted a shot so hard that it went through the twines' of the. net. That ef- fort was the one and only mark- ler in the second period.- . F At the beginning of the third period it became. obvious that the faster Charlottetown club had Summerside “on the ropes and it was not long that-this su- periority in skating became ob- vious. John Irwin got the five goal session underway for the lo- cals on a beautiful example of |; what persistent forechecking can do. Playing with one mar in the sin bin the Charlottetown club were controlling the play. Lin- ‘coln: MacKenzie ‘stickhandled his way through a maze of Summer- side players but missed Saint Francis X-men Team: = Wallops St. Dunstan's 11-0 _.By_ CHARLIE. Machin AN '. ANTIGONISH — St. Francis |Exavier University, 1966 MYHIL champions, _ | straight victory last night-an 110 eoee over second” place St. veunen* University Saints. St. Fx. will leave Wednesday for Sudbury, Ont. where they ° will represent the Maritimes at the | intercollegiate playdowns against ithe University of Alberta, Sir | [George William’s University, | Montreal. The winner of the Ontario-Quebec league has 5 yet ‘not been decided. Chi Chi Farenzena,. ‘year arts’ student from Sudbury, Ontario, led the X-Men attack with four goals four assists. His eight points bring his season's total to 29 goals and 25 assists for...54...points.....which...set..a new: league record. His 29 goals ties him with Maurice Roy for a new goal mark, four more than Miss | the old record held by Billy MacMillan. Other corers for St. Fx. were Blaise MacDonald with a pair, Murray Kelly and Ken Karlandor with one each. | end of the St. Fx. led 40 at the end first, 8-0 at the end of the sec- ond and added three unwanted goals in. the. third. They outshot the Saints, 57-31. HIT EARLY The X-Men hit the Saints at the out-set of the first. period: with two quick goals, both on scrambles,’ and": never looked P.E.1. Curlers — Blow First Game on the fourth and four tl zel Jamison rink of Alberta and lent to match Nestertmant | jthe. Marg Cooke ‘British Colum- total scoring for the 10 ends. bia foursome—both early fan fa-|CAME FROM BEHIND Mrs. ninth. and 1 come. + S- | ninth _.by...taking...out.her -oppo-— Cooke's. Vancouver rink/nent’s shot rock and then saw Joe Coyle and Dick Carroll. of Port Mrs. Hoar 10-9 in the round’s | an Ontario guard for a second between Morell: and Souris at! jthree on the 10th. inadvertently raise ‘Mrs. Snow, Jean Nickerson, Watt and Mary Lemes-| An the eighth and two in| FIRST ROUND 100 020-110 0— 5 011 101 001 1— 6 22 101.032 0—11 310 001 040 01—10 002 110 202 10— 9 | “too k their 14th back. They pressed the Saints in their own end and controlled the play throughout the game except for a few_minutes.in_ the final period. ; suffering from a back injury, * dressed. for last night's game! and played his regular shift but proved not 100 per cent fit. Glen :four. points. in front of Bloise | MacDonald of ‘St. FX. with 17) points and 20 assists. — Murray Kelly-of St..F-X., is. fifth spot with 28 points, one) Mike Kelly of Saint Dunstan's, ahead of Gordie Whitlock. ~~ Bower Out his -jter as the price of red fox pelts |... in {that netted the trappers- hunters well over the- 35000 00; King Winter done an ‘‘about face” in a hurry ... 15 -degrees below zero on Saturday morning | ‘of the 19th. Our ruffed ‘grouse | will sleep snug beneath the snow and the rabbits burrow deep | down in a Bs ina thicket. Foxes will take this weather in stride they are fat and well furred this winter and frost holds no terrors for them with the-coun- tryside swarming. with mice. | Give a fox a full stomach and | he'll take the La weather in his etride. | Fox hunters ond. trappers are | reaping a rich harvest this win | has hit a new high. At a recent -}Canadian Fur Auction at Mon- ‘treal extra large and large lfetched from $18.00 ‘to $25:50 | ed | while 1 pt 11 medium and small sold at prices ranging’ from $16 to $17. A few years ‘ago red fox | pelts were practically unsale- lions A i days. ago I had a . with Lloyd MacCal- one ancl fur buyer. He itold-me up. to February 15th he | had bought over 600 red fox = imark. He told me the highest- “price paid for a single pelt was - |$11.00- with the average price in the $7.00 and $8.00 bracket: The foregoing price was based on the ‘results of previous sales. Extra "King Winter” About Faces} Trappers, Hunters Profit _ | that 1_was_slated for- dismissal. Hughes, out with a pinched ves- e S I and large race isel in his leg, did not make the ; With Injury \from $7.0 to 99.25. hed | ip. MacCallum stated that fox| The victory for the X-Men| brought their season’s record to. 14-0 and 28 points. St. Dunstan’s second | ended the schedule with a- 10-4 jrecord, eight points behind St: | TORONTO (CP)—Toronto Ma- pelts have deteriorated badly le Leafs were down to one-goal- -sinee-February 15th and-with tender again Monilay when it signs of pelt value loss before was... announced--Johnny--Bower ,that...date. ...The-.-unseasonably. at Francis and two ahead of Mount ee cd ries. eT liar t stip a pat gee to cen A who had a record of 9-5. Bower was injured Sunday in in half and over that mark. Fox In the’ individual scoring race, [a National Hockey League game | jhunters have told me that this Association, to whom I talked just before my dismissal, told me to tear the summonses up. It_-was this ¢olumnist who dis- | posed of them, In fact the sum- monses were not mentioned. I was the one who disposed of them. I had quite a talk with the ex-president of the Association a few days. ago. He informed me in any event for the then Premier | was the one who wrote the | pungent new. item” to Flash | cident that a long time I was unaware at the time that the news item was intended for Flash Magazine but ... he’d |88Y have gotten it anyway. The my- stery of the intensive search of imy office is now explained thanks to the former Game As- sociation President. As the old story goes . “Alls well that ends well'’. I'd have been in a, nice pickle: if“ I'd Wave™ let “the Prominent Migratory Bird offen- ders off for a black mark would have been carried for the rest of my days and would never have about two years ago. . . by death. The two legal \ieuraed to the judges: chambers for the marking of exhibits. As the proceedings bogged down, Ray McCann, of the Braves’ legal staff, asked Judge Roller: - ‘We won't be here: opsspiotads. Sundays and nights." Judge Roller replied: oe “T. can’t ‘promise that.’ To accommodate the large crowd interested in viewing the proceedings, the case wags moved from Judge Roller’s us-- wal court room to a lerger one - in. the. Milwaukee county court-_- house. BULLETIN: is morning in the ea Early thi sec- ond round of the © Dominion Ladies Curling Newfoundland was le oa: eee es See ee three ends of play” ne LIONS WEEKLY DRAW WINNER 2nd Week ~ Can Love Survive In Our World? | Why is it fatal for couples to say “We are so much alike?” . How does love depend upon “sexual pride”? A well-known author takes a réalistic look at the problem in March Reader’s Digest. ‘What Love Must Be’ tells why many of us cannot find ‘lasting hap=~- piness, and how to overcome a modern attitude that « the night with three goals. W. Shaw, ‘Shirley Wiebe, ‘White and B. Nicolle got two | AT SOURIS ies Monday in the opening round | Dorothy Holgren, Joan LeCain goals each for eae Harbor. of Ontario scored three on. both Other scorers were Chi Chi Farenzena won the co- | wi New York - Rangers veted prize with his $4 pointe tw paar ay Beast ten days or. “shot infront or" eight ahead of SDU forward |lision with Ranger forward Jean the hounds are males ... the fe- | ana ee led the parade Ee ‘oughout the best part of the ‘of the hounds. I am afraid that season. In third spot was Mike ets ie ay eer will be a lot of widowed Kelly with his 10 goals and 31 lines, will have to depend on|f0x mothers with full care of fa- | assists, a new league record, | jynior Al Smith of Toronto Mart:| milies. Methinks its high time en ee ~ ae cae — their] i wehuk gr fs recovering "U ca a season. | Murray Harbor om a. lee injury and. Gary |The Souris game experts are un- from the Ameri-, der caustic comment with their Crushes Souris. can can silocdig. ‘League~Rochester ;“declared war" on foxes, _rac- Americans to replace the ailing ©°OnS and what have you ... SOURIS — Murray Harbor de- regulars, still is out with FI ih a i oe eee a feated the Souris Crossbones, |groin injury. the hunting season on October | 12-3 last night in the first game’ Toronto's next game ts J5th with prizes offered for the of the four-team round robin ‘against Montreal Canadiens winner in each class. As one tournament in the Intermediate here Wednesday. — {sportsman remarked: “all those 'B Kings County Hockey League. | fellows Mya the ant tea aa The game was played in the cary * year ‘round an Soest PPM CURLING DRAW. simi” be toaner reciente] The game was rough with a themselves ‘‘Do you know that | total of 11 penalties being Hand-| The following is the Montague * 0t as far fetched as it | ed out. Souris collected seven |Curling draw for today: sounds.” Another made this re- while Murray Harbor received |7 p.m. mark: “Why wasn’t war declar--| four. A fight between B. Chev-| Ice 1 —C. Nicholson, E. Shaw, 4 foxes in eastern Kings dur- erie of Souris and Gerry Rich- D, Sorrie, A. Coneen vs J. Mac. ‘%@ the winter when their pelts | ards of Murray Harbor broke Lean, John K. MacDonald, R. “ere worth real money. One | jout at the 19.59 mark of the se- Ferguson, A. Wright. fur buyer ‘stated he did mot buy | ‘cond period. 9 p.m.: a single fox_pelt from the area | Laas Clements of Murray | ie 1 —_Four_ Years: Gene Sate eines acer arbor was the high scorer of “Murphy vs Justin MacNeil. them or too cold: to bunt. A numberof readers of this column have got the impression that the President of the Game The following is today’s draw Harris, | at the Souris Curling Club: 1G Harris.“ ieee J. Rich-1 79pm ards and B. Herring with one | Ice 1 — Reg Peters vs “Feakins | each for the visitors. Scoring for or MacLeod: |Souris were C. Peters with two|. Ice 2 — C. Gallant, P. i ae \C. Gallant, W. Gillis vs D. 'send:-D- McLgrey,- J, coal land R. Young. = 9-11 p.m. | Ice 1 — Dr. Kassner, Dr. Mar- | old, E. Doucette, R. Coffin vs A. Peters, R. Solomon, D. Morrow ‘and B. MacLean. | Ice 2 — A. Griffin, W.. Ding- well, P. Gallant. E. MacSwaine vs Cecil MacDonald. D. Ching, ,Clarence MacDonald and B. cee bm nyt rman ane Referees for. the “game. were “DEAF ~ .The next scheduled game is Souris. The “SPECTRA”, a | new tiny aid—so small can barely be seen when worn—a. miracle to say | the least. No button, -no wire, KEEP UNDER HUNDRED Britain had 99 millionaires— a year—in 1965, . nine more than in 1964. _ ' Boertien. | —_——— ’ ‘Fantastic for. ‘anyone | nen : with nerve deafness. As Inter mediate C Hockey powerful as aids three ae times its size. Once you see and try it you'll. be convinced that this is | ~-_MORELL RINK what you have. wanted for years. All: our HEARING AIDS are in- Peakes Bombers. P lay host to ‘Souris Fish eee ae ae ss J. BE. Ramsay Ltd., 6156 Quinpool Road, Quinpool oF i Center, Halifax, N Cutters | March 2 at 8 p.m, past ten days or longer practic- | |males den quickly at the baying ons iaaneen| PLAYOFF FOR " Provinciol Vocational institute . St. Dunstan’ s |. Students—35c : 1st game ni iwe-eut-oldhres Series) HOCKEY a - High School Adults-—60c 01 Water St. Charlottetown = ‘