; rwnamn ‘ ' (when . - up! i . ‘1 i l l . Donald Norqual. right. of the US team scores second goal 11’) the United States- Canada world hockey cham~ Eight Players Suspended For Stick-Swinging Brawl REGINA lf'Pl Flight play. ers were susprndcd and fines totalling $135 were levied by Saskatchewan Junior Hockey L e a g u e commissioner Frank Bouchcr Monday following n pl swinninc brawl during the third period of a playoff game between Moose Jaw Ca- nucks and Melville Millionaires in Melville Saturday. ’llhc brawl sent two Mclvnlle players and .i liticsman lo los- pital t'or trcatmcnt. All-star dcl'cnccman (fury Kll~ patrick of Moose Jaw was fined $25 and suspended indefinitely. f‘. l Melville goaltender Harvey Ler-. fold. who suffered back injuries Today’s Minor Hockey Draw Following are the Flt'l‘YiIlt‘S scheduled for minors at Sports Arena. today: 11.00-12.00 Skwle Notrc Dame and Rochford Square girls. 4 00-430 Paperweights Tigers r<. Elk: l‘sorond gamel. 4.303.011 Papwrweizht: Budgies \S. Redwinzs lsecond garnet 5.00-6.00 »- Juveniles «a Play- off — PWC vs. Abbies. Officials: Les Barnes, Grant Crockett: Don Frizrell. Carl McCallum. Lou Fonfinato Still Suffering Partial Paralysis MONTREAL 'Ci’i »- Doctors oaid Monday Loud Fontinato. Montreal Canadiens dcfrnceman knocked out S.aliii‘d"ay crashed into ferod "a dislocation" in the. spine of his neck. Surgery did not. appear necessary. Dr. Douglas C. Kinncar of the Montreal G e n er a1 Hospital, where Fontinrto is resting. sai the arms of the. husky defence- man are. still partially paralyzed but “this is showing steady im- provement." A team spokesman said Fon- tinalo. nnc of the National Hockey League‘s badmcn with 141 minutes in penalties this season. is “almost certainly fin- ished for the season. if not longer." Fontinato was checkcd head- finst into the boards by Vic Had- ficld of New York Rangers late. in the second period of Ran- gers' 5-2 “on, He collapsed in the. ice. motionless and was taken to hospital with tempor- ary paralysis of the arms and legs. No penalty was called. It was thought an operation would be necessary. but Fon- tinato's condition improved. Dr. William Storrar. medical director of the hospital. said Fontinato's condition is “fairly good" no prediction of illt‘ effect the injury will have on his career can be made yet. A team spokesman said 20— year-old Jacques Laperrierc will probably be called up from Hull- Ottawa Eastern Pro Fontinato. of League to replace - Milwaukee scoREsFOR us. oionships in Stockholm Swe~ den yesterday. Canadian goalie is Seth Martin. At lef is Canada's 'l‘ed M'eki. The III the fracas. Dave Ferguson and Doug Ferguson ot' Melville and Ben Green and Don Nolin of Moose Jaw were suspended for the remainder of the series. Melville leads the best - of- sevcn quarter-final 3-2. .Iim Wisle of Moose Jaw and Don Gelowitz of Melville were given one-game suspensions. All drew automatic $5 fines for re- ceiving game misconduct penal- s. Rookic Gary Longinun of loose .law and John TlIUiilprlln of Melville were lined $10 each. Coaches Meim Prystai of F5 Canadians defeatcd the US. players 10-4. (AP Wire-photo by cable from Stockholm). Moose Jaw and Don Abel of Melville were t-Ined $25 {or fail- ing to control their players. Dave Ferguson was the most severely injured. A tendon in one finger was cut when he re- ceived a gash requiring: eight stitches. A hcad cut was closed with 14 stitches. Lcrt‘old's neck was injured when he was struck several tinics \\llll a stick and inicsman ’l‘i-il \‘ai'nton ll.'l(l a cut in his hand clide with 14 stitches. ’l‘liirti-lhrcc pcnnltics totalling 174 minutes were handed out iii‘ the game. ‘ 'At Lakeland. Fla. .Chi( Ml 100010. 4110 DetrOIt 000000 020- 2 70 Buzhardt. B a n m a n n '41. Fisher 19’ and Lollar; Lary. Foytack I4». Klinct 7'. Eagan 191 and 'I‘riandos. HR: Chi« Nicholson. At Fort Landerdalc. Fla. MI 002 002 - 5 I3 2 New Y'k (A) 02:! '202 00x - 9151 Willcy, Constable 14'. Ribant '51, White 171 and Root; Ford. ‘Terry i4). Stafford I71 and Howard. Blanchard (71. HRs: Mil—Taylor. Nyk —- Solomini, Maris. At Orlando. Fia. 1.0s Ang. (Nl0011041‘l0- 712:1 , Minnesota 113 020 102 - 813 2 Moeller. Ortega (3!, Calmus 16', Rowe t8) and Camilli: ‘Pascual. Kralick 14D. Sullivan at?) and Bailey, Zimmerman 151. HRs: LA -- McMullcn. Spencer. Skowron. MinnuAllis. son, Battey. At Pompano Beach. Fla. Baltimore 301.000 003 - 7 112 Washington 400 001 000 - 5 '7 0 Stone. Narum 14!, Miller '7'. J and Brown. Lau t?) ‘ I9i: Cheney, Dan- . Quirk '7'. Bouldin i9'1 and Schmidt. HR: Bit —— Gen- 9. ti . At Bradenton, Fla. Pittsburgh 002300 013- 9 92 Kansas City 200040301-10102 McBean. Sturdivant ‘41. Bul- ter 161, Schwall I9: and Plas- ketl, Brandt (61; Rakow, Pena (4!, Drabowsky <61, Fischer (9) and Sullivan. Azcue 16). HRs: Pgh —— Plaskctt. Elliot. Savage. Kcy»~Charles. At St. Petersburg, Fla. Cincinnati 010 010 010-3 5 0 St. Louis 110 252 00x- 11 120 Jay, Ellis (41. Heffner and Foilcs; Stark, Wild Duliba 16'. Brice l8) and Oil- ver. At (‘Icarwntcn Fla. New Y'k (Nl000300 5130‘ ‘9 81 Philn. 003 000 000-3 13 0 Reed. Bearnarth l4). Hawkins r7! and Sherry, Coleman l7): Brown, Quiroz (5;. Loch (8) and Dairympie. HR: ' ' —— ickman. At Mesa. Ariz. . Houstfln 0000100000- 1120 Chi (N) 40100000x- 5112 (Milton. Ycllcn (41, Giusli l6", Dickson t8) and Smith; Koonce. Toth (4'. Gerard l7) tell. Barragan (6'. HRS: Hstn—- Roberts. Chi—~Williams. At Tucson. Ariz. rims Aug. leveiand 200 010 20x - 5 ill and Bcr- ~ (A) 000 000 010-10 2 -) BASEBALL SCORES i 8" THE CANADIAN FRESSt Belmsky. Turlev 14‘, Reman- dez I7) and Rodgers. Sadnwskl lfii Perry. Curtis (5', Daley (Bi and Romano, Lipski (8t. l At Phoenix. Ariz. l ‘Boston 002 000 2110 - 7 1‘2 2 . San Fran 303 20010x - 913 .1 Delock. Spanswick (4'. Kols- ,tad (8; and Tillman; Sanford Larsen i4! Herhel 17) and Hallcr Coker (4). HR: SF‘ —‘ MCCovoy 2. CURLING DRAW The following is the (‘lii‘ilnfl 1draw or ednesday at e fCharlottetown Club. This is the final day of mixed curlinsz and is for the Imperial Oil and Prowse Trophies. l 9 AM. ‘ ce 1— MacGowan (Montl vs Dobson (c '2 —» Burke v: Craig iStJ) Ice 3 ~ Ballanlyne (Fred! vs Earl Machcod Ice. 4 — Forbes Fred Georne vs. D. Ice 5 — Nicholson (Mont) V: D, Bell. 11 A..\'I. lcr l -r Monr 'Mont) vs Mc- Carville (Mont: ‘ ice -— Allwood lP‘redl vs Ewinz. ice 3 ~ i)r. Rohichaud (Monw vs F. Acorn Ice 4 —- Rouse «Fred; vs An- derson Ice 5 Bryan (Alb) vs Mur- phy Ihlonc) DAFFY FLYNN VISITS CITY , . b SUITS Order now for Easter 0 monoclonal, tnlloml . world hm fabric: . Canada‘s greatest a value Wis" .00 TI TOP Toflored-to-measun m Credit terms available tut-It. m on". ll KiP MORGAN Benevolent irish Society offl- ciuals report that tickets for St. Patrick's play "Daffy Flynn" am going like hotcakes and they are predicting sellouts for both nights, Saturday. March 16 and Monday. March 111. This year's show is heralded as the greatest laugh hit in a long time and patrons can aswred ol 3 great night's fun. A most capable cast of 14 has been working hard these past, two months to make certain thati‘ cnstomers receive t 9 best in amaleur theatrical entertain- ment. > Kip Morgan. always a favorite on St. Patrick's. is back again and will be seen to fine advan- tage in the role of Jimmy" Carver. l Got y o iii tickets now at i Giczcy‘s Pharmacy. f‘nntwcll's Pharmacy. itrddin Rm: , Stoad'q Pharmam'. Medical Pharmacy. Hughes Dru: and Parkdale Pha ‘IY A matinee is scheduled for Friday afternoon at 3.30 All per- , formances will go at Birchwood High School auditorth '10 The Gunyrdlan..r(_7_i_i§riogitow_n. Tues; March 12, 1963. lBilly Danie NEW YORK (AP) -- Cassius Clay calls himself “the creat- lest" but he‘s far from that in Billy Daniels' estimation. Daniels‘ size-up of the un- ibeaten Clay encouraged the Jones camp but had little effect on the odds. Clay was held as n 13—to-5 or 3-to-l favorite, de- pending on where a betlor snapped in town. for the sold- out 10 rounder in Madison .Square Garden Wednesday night. Daniels. a ganglng hoary- Weight from Brooklyn. lost on cuts to Clay in the seventh round last May 19 and was out- ,pointed by Cleveland Williams day night. 53 3 V1 C < 2 ‘__’ cu < in a bruising battle last. Satur- Jones moo “tan in six." m: day night he chopped it to four. After Ht‘fl'ir" “oi-1; Jonel' manager. Alex Koskm “Doug .....-: confi- dent he can win. Hearing this i‘rcm Daniels is no surprise. We have our own ideas on Clay. We know he has weak spots and no! '1 going to work on i them." Jones and Clay finished training Monday. Jun. is Rate;— Asked to compzre Clay and Williams. Daniels said Monday: " ere's no comparison. Wil- liams hits much harder. I’d fight Clay every night in the COP 5—2 Win week. But that Williams. man.| he's a load of dynamite." V Highwaymen defeated Mari- Clay had predicted Daniels: time Electric 5-2 in Commer- would h‘i-tfatlll nilze' n Bailiff? . ciai Hockey League action at “ever ‘9 ca V 5 ° ° ' l the Sports Arena last night. Highwaymen ther he rocked Cassius twice Len Kelly. Ivan Brawn.’ with long rights to the head. ' Ring magazine rates Clay sec-j George 'Lefiy Dunn and A“ ond 8 mon g the heavyweight} Wells each scored once for the contenders. Jones third. winners with Jack Kane andi liams sixth and Danies eig t . - ~ v”. t Man The World Boxing Association Mike “WWW” bang he ‘ has Clay second. Williams l Elec‘mc mge‘me‘" . fourth, Jones filth. and Daniels! Highwaymen are currentlyl 5i)“ - l the paccsetters in the Common Brash Cassius first predictedf cial League. 1 TITLE MEASUREMENTS This is how. world welter- Cuba measure up for their weight champion Emile Grif- Maw 16 due “gm in L0, iith of New York and chal- lenger ‘~ Rodriguez of Angeles. (AP Wirephotm. Rustproofmg? Canadian winters can very quickly turn your car into the wallflower of the used car lot. Rust and corrosion take years off a car’s value. We've seen figures that say it can cost you up to $100 a year in repair bills. Rambler checks rust and corrosion before it starts. Here’s how; GALVANIZING For 1963 all Ramblers have 75% more galvanized metal than before. This is concentrated in critical areas such as the rocker panels which are constantly exposed to salt. DEEP-DIPTheentirecarbodyis submerged into six separate tanks. Each time, a solution cleans. scours and prepares the surface of the metal. THE LOW-PRICED AMERICAN SIX - THE POPULAR CLASSIC SIX - THE POWE ALLISON MacLEOD The car is dipped again, right up to the roof. in rustproofing primer paint. lt gets more rustproofing than any other Cana- dian car. (And we spill. literally, more than , others use.) The body then receives a second primer which is sprayed on. Well over 15 lbs. of rustproofing primer now coatthe steel. After this. the primer paint is baked on. Then a thorough wet-sanding removes every blemish. TRIPLE ENAMELLING A chip-resistant. salt-resistant super enamel is sprayed and baked on. A second and third coat follow im- mediately. then are baked to a durable gloss. APRODUCT OF AMERICAN MOIORS (CANADA) LIMITED 126 CUMBERLAND STREET Buell G: MacLeod Ltd. We _s_p_i_i_|_ more than others use -to keep your Rambler young for years A corrosion-inhibiting wax com- pound is sprayed inside girders. rocker panels andfenders.Asealercompoundisalsosprayed on critical underbody areas to provide addi- tional protection. Sounds elaborate? it is.This process makes yourRamblerthemostcompletely rustproofed car in the world. It cuts depreciation, rust-out repairs and repainting costs. And it keeps your Rambler a pleasure to behold. years longer. Cometimefora new Rambler. you'll beamazed at yourtrading power. Fora run-down on all the Rambler features that give “maximum useful- nesstothe user';seeyournearestdealersoon ‘l 1963 Winner of the coveted Motor Trend Magazine “Car of the Your" award. "For outstanding dull" achievement and engineering leadership” RFUL AMBASSADOR V8 _ no. 7364 ppgguauuuv 4;: ii.