, (M - , \\ L~‘ \\ Albert Ellsworth holds a live 6 - pound «sturgeon caught Thurs- day morning in a herring net one- half mile east of .the Murray HUNTER'S CORNER ROYAL FISH River Bridge. _The sturgeon is called 3 royal fish because Her Majesty can claim any sturgeon caught in the waters around the United King- don. It is rare in Prince Edward Island waters but is the source of caviar, a delicacy prepared from the roe of sturgeon. The herring net in which the royal fish was caught is owned l It Looks Like Record A Year For The 1958 will go down on the re- cords of trout fishermen as the year in which so many big trout were caught. Four and five poun- ders ‘have been creeled almost with monotonous regularity. 1958 cannot be called the yefar of the big trout for big trout have al- ways been with us. Take North Lake for instance. 15 or 20 years ago when the residue from Starch. operations practically wiped out the trout in North Lake. Scores of- big tackle busters measuring from 20 to 26 inches in length lay rotting on the shore of the lake while many more drifted out to sea with the tide. ‘The length of a trout is not a siire way of computing its weight. The 6 pound 5 oz. caught by Chesley Wood, Mount‘ Edward Rhad, measured 22 inches. This trout was a beauty and carried its size back to) the tail. I have examined trout 22% inches that only weighed 3 pounds. They were the long, slinky type. The record trout taken this season at North Lake weighed 5 pounds 3 ozs. Another weighed an even five. There may have been heav- iér trout caught that I didn’t hear about. Vernon Causeway has come up with a number of three pounders. . .just ordinary run of the -mill trout‘ as measured by this season’s standards. ‘ ' 31 hear that at least two trout were hooked at Midgell that c6u1dn’t be controlled :1 ii d broke‘ clear. Two were hooked on spinning takle at Seaview recent- ly. Neither were on longer than at matter of seconds... just a frothy, boiling swirl and the fun wins over. Oneangler stated that the strike was so heavy it prati- cally. tore the rod out of his hands. Both straightened out the hook on the lure and it requires considerable leverage I0 do ‘that. Neither trout broke water and their size could only guessed at. I have a hunch that the Midgell trout. . . the"-“ 6 bound 5 ounce heavy weight. . . will be outclassed by a seven or.’ eight pounder before the season} . Is. over. The. question is: where and by whom will it be caught? Many anglers are wondering just Why so many large trout are be- ing hooked this season. Methinks the mild, open winter and except- tionally early spring break - up has something to do with putting the big fellows in .a scrappy mood. . PASSING MOURNED The sudden passing of Doctor- Hector (“Gus”) MacKenzie recen- fly at South Lake has left a gap 111 the ranks of the true sports-i men that will require a long time? to fill. . .if it is ever -filled. I first E met him twenty-four or twenty- i_1Ve years ago when he was go- ing to College. It was in 1933 or 34 H year or so after being taken on the strength of the R.C.M. Pol- ce. I remember the occasion so “IL It was in a June d-awning It Matthew's Pool, Gurney’s ream. Oovehead. The “Straw- Run” was on in full swing and the stream was flooded with °19=’in. fresh run trout. _a move to put a crimp in ::“9111g_and ‘jigging’ operations fore it got underway the late Sergeant “Joe"‘ Trainer. dropped myself and Cst. Taylor off at 9°? dusk the evening before. th? holed up in a dense spruce ,41cket and waited out the night. emfvas a long, cold, dreary vigil lvened by 'l‘aylor’s grousing in evgmh English accent. He cussed -‘herb; trout, rabbit_ and bird on againslland in-to oblivion and out * aylor wasn't a game man pm Iver else he was. For my ‘ rather enjoyed the outing. I . -Watched the night clouds send- by Albert Ellsworth of Lower Montague. Golf Club Opens Today Belvedere Golf Club will of- ficially open for the season to- day. . Everything is in readiness for a really great season, promising to surpass the many fine ones of past years. Club sweepstakes will be staged today and Monday and entries are being accepted at the pro shop. I The entire 18 holes are ready as well as a practice area directly opposite the main gate. Cecil “Bubby” Dowling is back on the job as the club professional again this season. Members are reminded of‘the opening dance in the spacious club house on Saturday May 24 commencing at 9:30. All the club house facilities will be available. Probable Pitchers NEW YORK (AP) —- Probable pitchers in today's major league baseball games with _won - lost records in parentheses: American League Anglers led from C.A. Frizzell’s Store on the Covehead Road. I nudged Taylor and cautioned silence. I heard the sharper note as they crossed the foot bridge and then silence. We waited. No splashing or other untoward sounds greeted our ears. Soon the soft hiss of a casting line and we knew our night watch had been fruitless. The anglers were Dr. Gus and Fent Newsome. Gus was just a stripling at the time and told me he was attending College. Both had their angling licen- ses and everything was in order. So it was in the inteyvening years I have checked him near Grove Pine Bridge at 2.00 a.m. when the night mists swirled over the alders and a deep chill hung over the Valley. It was always the same. . .he played the game as a true sportsman should. If they were all like Doctor "Gus” Mac- Kenzie there would be no need of game wardens. ‘May his memory remain with us and help" keep our feet from straying from the path of ‘true spor-tsmanship. (Hole-In-One . AI Belvedere The season's first hole-in-one came last evening at Belvedei-e Golf Course. It was Maynard MacMillan of Charlottetown who turned the Chicago at Cleveland - Moore (0-1) vs lVIcLish (0-0). New York at, Washington- Shan.tz (3-0) vs‘ Griggs (-10). Baltimore at Boston—Portocar- rero (1-0) vs Braumann (1-1). Detroit at Kansas City (N)- Lary (3-2) vs Urban (1-1). National League . nasium in New York, and I want By W. R. WHEATLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer ~l\/IONTREAL (CP)—-Yvon Du- relle, tanned and looking wel‘. conditioned. started his final training licks Friday in prepara- tion for his fight next Wednes- day against Germinal Ballarin of France. The Bale Ste. Anne, N.B., fighter, Canadian and British Empire light-heavyweight cham- pion, arrived from his home Thursday. He was two days later than expected because of an iii- jury suffered by his young daughter. “I didn't like interrupting my training but I don't think the in- terruption will bother me too much,” said Durelle. “I started about three weeks ago." Durelle said his present weight is 178 pounds. He brought along his sparring mate, Kayo Brown, who said: “I boxed with a lot of good boys at the Bobby Gleason gym- to say this Durelle hits harder than any of them. He can bust in your ribs." PLAN DTAILY WORKOUTS Cubs Rally, 4 Beat Giants By THE CANADIAN PRESS After three Chicago pinch-bib ters had batted in one run each, Lee Walls singled across the win- ning marker from second in the ninth for a 6-5 Curb victory over San Francisco Giants Friday. Three other games were played at night in the National League: Pittsburgh at Phila- delphia, Milwaukee at Cincinnati and Los Angeles at St. Louis. All four games in the American League were played at "night. Baltimore was at Boston, Chic- ago at Cleveland, New York at Washington and Detroit at Kan- sas City. The Cubs' two-run ninth nulli- fied a five-run Giant sixth in which Willie Mays slammed a three-i'un homer. I. Dale Long doubled across the first Cub run in the first and homered with none on in the fourth. TIES THE SCORE After Bobby Thomson's lead- off single in the ninth brought In the fifth Giant pitcher. Ray Crone, pinch-hitter Bobby Adams do-ubled Thomson in for a 5-5 t.e. Walls’ long single to center brought across Adams after catcher Bob Schmidt failed to hang on to Mays’ throw to the plate. The winner was No. 3 Cub pitcher, Don Elston, who struck out the Giant side in the 8th on 11 pitches. It was Elston’s fifth victory without defeat. In the .Giant- sixth, after Danny O.’Connell singled, Willie Mays smashed Taylor Phillips. first pitch over the left center bleachers for a 3-2 San Francisco lead. ' Mays’ three-run homer moved him into a tie with Spencer for the league RBI leadat 28 each. trick on the 12th hole. The 160 yard hole is a par three. I SI)1(vI ilifts liiiesn 1: liiismgfiigll 53“ F‘''a1“°i5°° 3‘ chi°‘‘g‘’— ) I _ ' . »_ ’ hole-in-one. He was using a IIIIITI‘: Gg‘eZA(3 21) v:tHS(t’b1Ef,ui(S2_§New_§ her 6 iron when he accomplished 5 913395 J (H) his feat. Playing with him at the conqbe (0- VS 373 5,0“ t, (N) time were Harold “Red” Howatt Mllwaukee at Cmcmna‘ ‘ and Bill MacGregor. Rush (2-1) vs Acker (0-0). ‘Pittsburgh ‘at Philadeiphia—— Kline (4-2‘) vs Roberts (2-4). L MORE MONEY FOR YOUR WOOL Added to the Faithful Marketing Service that has been avail- able since this company was organized in 1918, you now get a I sizable Government Deficiency Payment ‘Having given leadership in obtaining this additional return, this GI-owe;-5’ Company has earned the loyal support of every tonfhllast the moon and listened, £mm.eS(dIe1e§‘ splash of feeding) ‘tamed lines the thump of ai ‘ dose. rabbit awoke me froml ' Al the first Ii}?!-1€‘*llI(e whist eedgis :15 the birds her 2): (311 the marshy creek bor-Z Wood 810 9 Second growth 1*:-rd-: Q a W I’eS_ at Union Road gave: 1 heardarmlflg thrill. It was then; - , the thump of footsteps: light of dawn thel Ie of Woodcock‘ left their night, /,“*""““‘ down the steep path that) sheepman. 5 Top Market Values and the Full Benefit of the Extra Payment I are assured under our Orderly Selling on a Properly Graded l Basis. Fleece Twine and shipping tags are available on 1'equest from your local Co-operative Association, or write Producers Co- operative Association, Limited, Charlottetown, P. E. I. SHIP COLLECT. THE CHEAPEST WAY TO: Producers Co-operative Association, Ltd. Charlottetown, P. E. I. ‘ b 1 cl with the name and address of the Evifilgrsavi/lfitstréhuliin Eleéggelettering with ink, one tag to be Securely attached to the outside of the sack and another placed on the inside. ~ It is‘ in your interest to see that wool is properly prepared for market. Growers should: ;- §:;:“.’,:.:.§‘,‘:.i‘§?.;“3.“.‘::§.3;°‘,;:.i:‘3.§’.“i..‘y.:‘;%..e:‘.f.i‘..£l°:i‘:.; . be removed and shipped Separately- 3. Sheep should be shorn when dry, and wool should be stored in ,a place free from dampness. 4. if there are any black fleeces pack them in separate bags. CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LTD. Head Office: 217 Bay St., Toronto, Ont. DOUGLAS BROS. SIGN PAINTING Plastic _Signs Trucks Lettered -— Lettering BENOIT SIGNS 55 Prince St. Dial 3817 Reasonable Prices new murs SEMI-GLOSS WWII IA‘ FLO-GLAZE PAINTS & JONES LTD. Durelle Starts Final Training Jim Davenport walked and i -. Brown will work out daily with Durelle. who will be happy to take on any volunteer sparring mates. The same goes for Bal- larin. "We would like some variety," said Jean Bretonnell, Ballarin"s manager. “But apparently there aren't many sparring partners around here." The French fighter with the luxuriant mou sta che arrived Thursday. He had a spurring mate in tow, Juan Pomera. Durelle said he is aiming at another meeting with Tony An- thony, who won on a seventh- round TKO in their recent scrap. “»I think I lost all my friends down east in that last Anthony fight," said Durelle with a laugh "I had hundreds of letters de- nouncing me at great length. I notice, though, that mighty few’ folks wrote me when I won. I-IOPES FOR ACTION “I really don't know much about this Ballarin, except his record in the book looks pretty good and they say. he’s a puncher. I hope he's the sort of guy yvho will walk right in and swap punches. That will make a good fight. “If I beat Ballarin I hope pro- moter Eddie_Quinii gets Anthony for me in a return match. And I think Montreal would be the righ-t spot for a fight with cham- pion Archie Moore. “I saw the Moore-Willie Bes- manoff fight on TV and saw old Archie having lots of trouble. He had more trouble than I did with Besmanoff. who is a real tough fighter.” The New Brunswick fisherman said most of the letters he re- ceived-‘ after losing to Anthony were albusive-—and unsigned. WAS SENT FISH “It got so that I looked first to see if a letter was signed. If it wasn’t I threw it away without reading it. _‘‘Some guys sent me caiis of fish. That was all right with me. I ate it‘ although I h.ave lots of fish‘ of my own. Right now the lobster crop is fine, but we fish- ermen get only 30 cents a pound and do all the work. “We get 50 to 55 cents a pound for the Miramichi silver salmon, the best in the world. Just now the herring are running great Strong Chance Of New Records By DALE BURGESS INDIANAPOLIS. (AP) A strong chance of new qualifying records at the 21/2-mile Indiana- polis motor speedway may draw 100.000 fans to the 48-year-old race plant today. The entire 33-car starting field may be filled in the seven-hour sessioni beginning at 11 a.m. CDT. Thirty-five of the 56 entries have run practice laps over 140 miles an hour and a dozen have been cloc-ked at 143 or better. Only five of last year's qualifiers could beat 143 in the official 10- mile trials. ‘ The 1956 record of Pat Flaherty of Chicago, 145,596 miles per hour, stood up under last year's assaults after engine sizes were CLIIL from 274 I20 256 cubic inches of piston displacement. His best LOS ANGELES (AP) — Herb Elliott of Australia smashed the existing world record for the mile run [Friday night with an amazing time of 3 minutes. 57.8 seconds. Elliott's time over a grass course eclipsed the recognized world mark of 3258.0 set by the great John Landy of Australia June 21. 1954. Pending and claiming recogni- -England’s Derek Ibbotson July 19.1957. Elliott, running under four min- utes for’ the fourth time in his career, far outdistanced his coun- tryman, Merv Lincoln. ~ The pace for the first two laps was set by an unheralded runner from the University of Texas, Drew» Dunlap. With Elliott close behind, Dun- lap was timed at 58.5 for the first quarter of a mile and 2:05 for the second quarter. ’ Elliott in the third lap sud-_ denly ‘blazed into ‘ tremendous speed and took charge about 220 yards in the (lap. His time was 3:03. The crowd of nine 35,000 re- alized they were in for a thrill and Elliott widened his lead with each second. ‘ This was the 38th time the once so-called impossible four-minute mile had been b e a t e n since and I'm -buying/ another new boat. NEW, COLOR FOR YOUR HOME....W|TH RUXATONE‘ THE MULTI-COLO\’R PLASTIC osconnon, FINISH Re-style your home with the latest color fashions . ROXATONEI ROXATONE! A single the finish. to ROXATONE! ROXALIN OF (A ‘Trade Mark WRITE FOR DECORATING HNSINGION SUMMERSID . . tone-on—tone textured patterns for walls, ceilings and furniture with modern There’s no muss, no mist with easy-to-apply 2, 3 or 4 color effects on any properly primed or sealed surface. It resists scufl's and scrapes, lasts more than three times as long as conven- tional paints. Roxatone can be scrubbed with strong solvents or detergents to remove greasy stains or finger marks—without damaging For a complementary flat finish, we recom- mend ROXAMUL VELVET—color-keyed NEW TORONTO, ONTARIO by Doris Love, Canada’s leading color consultant HOME COLOR GUIDE color combinations for every room in the home ROXATONE COLOR PLANNING showing interiors with Roxatone Decorator Finisha of tone-on-tone colors ti, ~ )[HunMAN Rofer Bannister of England Elliott Smashes World Record tion is the time of 3:572 set by " lap. at 146.946, matched. Engineers and mechanics have found out how to regain the horsepower they lost in last years rules change, and the field for the May 30 race is prac- tically certain to be the fastest of the 42 Indianapolis auto clas- sics. HOT LAP TIME Ed Elisian, husky former gun- ner's mate from Oakland, Calif., has turned an unofficial lap at 146.9 miles an hour in a Zinvk spe- cial. > Laps almost as fast as Elisia.n’s have -been run by Pat O’Connor, North V e.r n o n, Ind.; national rchampion Jimmy Bryan, Phoe- nix, Ariz.; A. J. Foyt Jr., Hous- ton, Tex.; Jud Larson, Tulsa, Okla.; Ray Crawford, Pasadena, Calif.; C h u c k Weyant, Spring. field, Ill., and Dick Rathmann, Miami. Larson and Foyt never have started in the 500-mile grind, but also was un- -broke through in the little ham- let of’ Oxford, England, May 6, 1954. Lazlo Taborl, the exile from Hungary, ran third in 4:04.44. REMEMBER WHEN Fox won the Kentucky Derby 28 years ago today. The colt, ridden by Earl. Sande, ’went on to ac- complish the triple crown of the American turf, in c 1 u din g the Preaikness and Belmont Stakes, one of only seven horses which have duplicated the feat of Sir Barton,.owned by J. K. L. Ross of Montreal, in 1919. rive ouI'ACHE «Q4 '7 “BEST BY TEST” , oun SPECIALTY cuocomrn MILK , Please ask us in advance William Woodward's Gallant Saturday, May 17,1958The Guardian Page 5 ‘I d J youngest driver among the prob- in many years. both have been outstanding on able qualifiers 811d 0116 Of the‘- smaller tracks. Foyt, 23. is the bestvnew pI'0SP9Cl5 at the track‘ -2 L 5.. —j IN THE MIDST OF SUCCESS YOU MAY SUFFER (DISASTER! or the earthquake, or always the fire, YOU 93“ “eel 3“ economic wall by means of Insurance. . _ , ‘ A lifetime of gathering and Savlllg may disappear In a few minutes. Why take chances? The only safeguard is adequate Insurance: Supplemental Covers. Consult our Agents, or call on '” HYNDMAN’ & co. LTD. Insurance Since 18724 including write or Our experience of over three-quarters or a century as Insurance Underwriters, is at your disposal. . OFFICES: . CHARLOTTETOWN Q SUMMERSIDE Q MONTAGUE Q ALBERTON Although you cannot stop the w'mdSt0Ym. 01‘ the lightning I H HOT TURKEY SUPPER WEDNESDAY. MAY Zlst Starting at 5 P. M. St. Pius X Parish Hall. Parkdale Bazaar table; admission 1.25 person, children 60c. v. Supper sponsored by the Catholic Women’s League. years and years IT 1 in Ii E \‘ gférz//$41/(-2/10/?'r OIL HE.-IT SUNSHINE ISLAND DAIRY DIAL 4251 HIGHLIGHTS mam lunounuc nonm.-rs . Auhnniacd WILSON & MOORE 79 sr. PETER’S Roan DIAL 9511: i CUDMORE'S _ DRY CLEANERS 129 Kent St. Phone 4922 DON'T MISS , _ THE BIG JAMBOREE SHOW At the ROLLAWAY CLUB MONDAY. MAY 19 Featuring Charlie Bailey and Laurie Myers of Wheeling, West Virginia Doors open at 7—Show starts at 8:00- Admission: Adults $1.00; Children 500. spray operation gives NADA LIMITED Registered 58?! FREE BOOKLETS ‘E Your two big problems tive who is free, fearless - CHARIOIIETIIWN STREETS, WATER & SEWERAGE. I feel that my six years experience in the City Council and my record there; especially as chairman) of the Street Department for four years is something for you to consider when choosing a representative for your Ward. / You need a strong voice in the new City Council. You need a representa- record of Just Achievements. I offer you my serxiices with a sincere promise to use my ability in the best interests of Ward 6 in particular and the City in general if favored with your confidence on Election Day, Wednesday, May 21st. ELECTORSQ WARD 5 P. R. McCGRIlIIAC . CANDIDATE FOR COUNCILLOR during the next few years are going to be‘ and independent. You need a Councillor with I. experience and Yours truly, P. R. M-¢:CORMAC. Big fuel savings for A