JUNE 10. 1951 "R llaek Stretch (Continued from Pale I) . in 1950. Among . them are my Partner 2.09 with 23. Billy 2.06 112. (formerly owned by ,6. Stewart. New Glasgow) 21. Iola Henley 2.09 with 18. id 6. R. 206 N5 with 1'! and spencer 2.06 with 17. frgenda of Louis 0. Najac. wean. Rhode Island, will be i to know that the popular :15 going all atrong as ever. 3 his column: of horse news (or the Evening Bulletin and at- tending horse shows and every- mng connect ' with the harness noise or thoroughbred. The com- )-m. week he will be reporting a M; horse show at Tiverton. R. 1. gm his wife will Judge the Gay 90-5 riass. He will also attend the mrness races at North Kingstown. 3:. and the next day attend the horse show at the Bay state Race- .-gy, Foxboro, and report that for hi, pgiper. His facile pen makes his harness horse gossip and reports of the shows easy reading. vii... top money winning pacer of alirtime is Good Time-with earn- mg of 5157.904. Next Ila Dr. Stanton with S127.l?6 and third is Indian Land with 3123.437. the bulk of it won with Joe O'Brien rir'll'lllg. In fourth place is Jerry me First with 5123.322. followed hv urattan McKlyo with 5120.897 and then comes "the horse that tmia forgot"-Single G. With 8113.- iga, single 6. had. to pace 434 hi-nis and to win 262 of them. be 51.". times second and 38 times third in roll up t at amount of money, .-hile Good ime, because of the mg purses he raced for. onlyvhad in go 55 beats. win 41 of them. be six times second and six times third. The family of Even song. the most remarkable speed producing mare the sport has ever known. made harness racing news last WINK. some of it good and some fit it bad. On the bright side of lh.- picture was the straight heat ililtlfy scored at Toledo, Ohio. in the 511,000 matron -atake by Even g..p.;'s granddaughter, scotch p,.mhm. The win stamped Lee C. .Vir.N'amara's Indianapolis filly as me one to beat in the &90.000 iiaznblctonian at Goshen. N. Y. August 8th. Tempering that news -nmcwhat was a bulletin from rvainut Hall Farm. Kentucky. In- uouncing the death of scotch ithyihm. dam of the young mare scrvich Song and daughter of live-n song. that. injured. la a. filly Lever got to the races but three foals she produced by Volomite ranked her an a reat brood mare rxen though she d at ten. The first wu the good pacer .-zcoich Melody and the next two were Lusty Song, winner of the law) Halnbletonian. and scotch nnythm, the filly that stands in match her brother's accomplish- nzenia this year. scotch song's lmlrth and last foal is Theme Song, which was sold for 317.500 35 it yearling last fall. Even Song. that died at the age of 26. was represented at Toledo by three sons. Mighty Sana. Flyine Sons and Hit song. All are rated as pnsslbin 2,00 gdditions to her list. sap Palin. the Indianapolis horseman that started out some In years ago with the pacer Pos- .'-lhlIlI',V and won fifteen races with llzm in a single season. marking llillll in ace U2. is still the top iwn-minute relnsman being cred- -Wvl with 84 miles in that time or Writer. 24 of them with Grey- :Il'1ilnd. the world's champion trot- lilnr. still holding down second ',i'Iarc even though he has been lllricilve for the past 25 years is Tommy Murphy of Poughkeqssie mr.h 34 of them made before Palin Jwarl stopped a single mile in that ' nnvrh. Roosevelt Raceway hold: both the world's trotting and pacing Accord over a half-mile track. The ' .0! its trotting mark was set Past year by Proximity 1.59 NS ,:lnri the pacing mark of 2.00 1X5 was made by Good Time at this j;inar's opening almost two weeks win. It was Dusty Hanover that -glormcrly held the pacing -record and he made it at Delaware. Ohio. jinx 104042.00 U2. He was driven -In Vic Flemming. The world's almost performance on a half- jfrnlle track was made by Billy .?Di:ect in 1939 at Altaxnont, N. Y.. -.vhnn he stepped in 1.09 SM. It foal. a performance against time .anri with a. pacemaker. On that .0'fasi0n he was driven by Wil- fllam Flemming. a son of Vic Tflcmmlng. s Woxlmiiy. queen of modem fI'lViLil1R mares. has been retired 3'lcr an unprecedented career ii'.lll('.I1 took her to the top of the ;iunnov winners among all stand- ,HHi hrcd race horses: Her earnings -0! 323-2.i329.87 is greater than her Iosrst competitor. Goldsmith Wald 2.14. who. however. accumu- -lated more money by racing ex- .lubltlon miler. 1-ler owners have lnerided to send her to Walnut .Hnll Farm this fall. where she 'fu-st saw the light of day. having .-linen sold as a yearling in 1943 to . V R. Scott of Baxter Springs. Kiln-SM. for ihe modaat sum of n-WAD. As a two-year-old she. took 1 time record of 2.20. but was not rnlisidereri of much account. It was when she came into the own- t"5l1Ip.of Ralph ind Gordon ver- hurst oi Victor-.rN. 1'. that aha commenced to improve and in a few years was at the top. There waa some lively doings at the Sydney Sports Centre last Tuesday night wlthithe daily dou- ble split between a Mr. Mcsween. an electric welder at No. 16 Col- liery. and a Mr. Mitchell. a grocer at River Ryan. For an invest- ment of 9.00 they each received 337456. the pacers Bob Long and Traffic Graitan making surprise wine to give those wonderful odd-S. Three newcome . to the Maritimes the pacera June 8.. Shining Hour and Adam's Orphan, made their debut in grand style, the two for- mer winning boih of their dishes and the latter one. June 8. was purchased at the Harrisburg sale last fall and is a four-year-old by Congressional 2.04 1-2. out of a lplendidly bred dam. She had been broken as a two-year-old. was trained up to a mile in 2.19. (quarter in 30 seconds) then turn- ed out. Now that she has some age and is sound she may turn out to be a real star. Her fast- eat heat Tuesday night was 2.3! 1-5. She Is owned by Mal- colim Munroe and Harry LeVait of Sydney. Shining Hour 1: a ihree-year- old by the Ohio sire Siskiyou. She made a number of starts last year in very fast company but did not win any heats. Tuesday night she was unsteady getting away with the Gate but made up a lot of ground and won by a margin each heat. She is owned by Ralph Bans of New York, is in the Cadegan ntable and was driven by Worrell Lewis. Her fastest heat was 223 4-6-mighty good time for a cold night. Adam? Orphan la a five-year-old pacer by Calumet Adam 1.59 3-4, dam. Mary Peel, a granddaughter of Grattan Bars 1.59 1-2. She took a record last year as a iou:r-year- old of 2.11 and this season was eligible to the 223 pace. He was purchased by Sylvester Phalen. Glace Bay. out oi the consign- ment brought back from Harris- burg by P. J. Cadegan. l-lis mile In 2.18 8-6 in which Lillian Bud- long was second was the fastest of the night. Chrlsty Budlong 2.06 8-5, the fastest trotting mere ever bredl in the Maritlmes, dropped .a foal June 2nd. by Pagllacci 2.09 1-2. which has been described io us as very beautiful with white face and four white feet. She is at the farm oi George Mccoubrey, who has wintered her for owner George Brooklns of Kensington. George McIntyre, proprietor of Montague track. is putting on the most ambitious early season pro- gram in the history of harness horse racing in this Province. The .Frce-For-All has four pac- ers that have records better than 2.10 and all are in tip top condition. The No. I Classified will see the first appearance of the pacing mare Silk Hal 2.06 l-b. owned by Roy Bevan, with other pacing stars such as Filbert, Donna Mae, Rhodola D., Lucky Number. Billy Conn. New Look and Lillian Budlong. There are eleven en- tries in the No. 2 Classified in- cluding Carol Cumba, a nine- year-old 221 class pacer with a record of 2.11. She made seven siaria last season racing through Maine and was first to the wire on two occasioie. She is now in the stable of Earle Semple. The 2.30 Trot and Pace has 20 en- tries and will probably be raced in elimination heats. We sincerely hope that George's efforts to give a first clan program will bring out a record number of harness horse fins. llunters corner (Oontinued from Page a) rm--Z The 113' castlnl was mainly in the nature of a blind. as it wu Very brlsht. neverthel as three aalt water trout found ir way into my waders (I had no creel with me). Two were seven and a half inches and the third crowded the hill-Pound mark close. The last one fought like a tiger and I'd hesitate before tying into a three A Possessed with such a scrappy firhtinr Ipirlt especially in water up to my him and no landing net. There are big trout in this pond. Once a regular whale smashed out, of the water a min. dred feet to my right. The gun glinted on hunks oi water as big as eggs that were tossed into the air when the big fellow smacked back into his domain. He broke several times later in the evening but deeper out into the pond. As the night shadows crept over the water a boat, rowed by a grown man. crept out oi the rushes and headed to the immediate vicinity of the 'set line'. We left off fish- ing and sat in the car. Through the glasses one could see the few inches of black alder. that mark- ed one end of the cork line. My companion held the glasses. then lowered them and spoke: "The corks are down". I kept my eyes on the man in the row--boat. In a. moment he pulled up anchor and moved close to the anchor stick. 0 O O 0 My partner remarked: "l-le's watching the car". We were at least 150 yards away and I knew he couldn't see any movement in the car's darkened interior at the last glow from the west would re- flect on the widows and produce a silvery sheen while the spot where the glass was rolled down would show as a black hole. It was an interesting show. The boat's occupant finally dropped anchor and began to use the long bamboo pole. . . . In a moment or two he lowered the pole and took hold of the set line. I could follow the movement of his hands as he drew the line over the bow of the boat. A long .darklsh object hung from one hook. "A trout". I exclaimed. "No", came the answer from the holder of the glasses. "its just a clump of weeds". He was a cagey customer. He drew about half the line and after giving the car another close scrutiny picked up his bamboo for another spot of casting. After this little act he completed the haul- ing of the set-line. He had no luck. The trout, or what have you. that. pulled the corks under till they were entangled in the weed growth had evidently broke clear. I I 0 when he rowed ashore I met him at the landing. we talked for a. few moments but he made no mention of the mysterious line of corks. I then 'put the arm on hlm' to use an old police expres- sion. He admitted pulling the set line but said it was out of cur- iosliy. They say that curiousity killed a cat once and the same trait may well cause a marked lmpness in a pocket book. It de- veloped that the line had been set out by another, incidentally by n thirteen-year-old and one of the quartette of teenagers I had talk- ed to earlier in the evening. Me- thinlm this was a community af- fair. However that may be some- one will pay for this little breach of the fishing regulations. Moral: Look not upon a set-line when 1 the corks are down. we pulled' the .Ill.'iQ and the method of taking trout is tough hooks were all freshly baited. This - rm: i GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN r 00M Machine Speeds Production This year's Canadian Interns. tlonal Trade Fair has uncovered yet another story of the progress Canada is making in the develop- ment of industrial manufacturing equipment. The Canada Cycle and Motor Company of Weston, Ont- ario. unveiled to world buyers and Benerai public alike a new ma- chine that other leading bicycle manufacturers throughout the world have tried unsuccessfully to develop for the past half century. Designed -and built entirely by the Weston firm in just two and a hill! YEA-rs. the new machine com- pletes in 40 seconds the Job of tightening the spokes in a bicycle wheel and. at the same time. tru- ing the rim of the wheel to the alignment of the axle. Though these two operations may seem relatively simple to the layman who has not tried to build and true a wheel, they have eluded bicycle engineers for years, ac- cording to Mr. Leonard Shakesby. Chief Engineer of C.C.M. and designer of the machine. When using one machine. it finished wheel can be produced every 40 seconds. For higher production, two machines can be worked by one operator which will almost double the output and produce two finished wheels, say. every 50 seconds. The machine simply centres the wheel with the spokes loosely lac- ed. The top of the machine drops down to hold the wheel in pos- itlon and particularly the rim dead true. Then. 36 little arms each equipped with a patented wrench, slide on the spoke nipples and the wrenches are spun on geared arms. the development being that all 36 arms are impelled by hyd- raulic fluid from a central point and pressure applied to a. liquid is transmitted with equal intensity to'all areas. Every little wrench tightens its spoke to exactly the same tension the machine stops - the top lifts and out comes the finished wheel, truly aligned. ,ggj..:L.:.::--G- on the big fellows as it is in work ing order night and day and is there waiting till they are in II hungry mood and the surround- ings are quiet and serene. Leavm: one's fishing pole anchored at some likely spot with a baited hook in the water and wandering off for an hour, or a day. also come: under the heading of set-llnu and is illegal. '.Iigging' trout. is It pl'aci,lce that is far more common than is gen- erally supposed. This subject will be touched upon later. Netting takes them wholesale and is on a par with raiding the spawning springs in November and pacem- ber. Yes. any trout that lives till it reaches the four pound or bet- ter class must live I Charmed W9- srops HEADACHE; F 51' ASPIRIN and sllodes. Popular prices from (Off FATHER'S DAY slliiilAY .lIlilE 17th. sronr Ann-nnrss SHIRTS Just for Father on Father's Day-All sizes DOZEIVS 4”” 90””-9 OF ' Era comfortdle. E3.i!I5 ”' SIIMMER IIATS Ponomos, straws and gobardines. Smart and dmsy looking-and Assorted rllodes so cool and h,- 1 .El!5 "P SIIMMEII SUIGKS Fine gobordines, worsieds, he will surely like a pair of time. Slocks for Dad . ALSO socxs, TiES, and fIonneIs- PAJAMAS, SPORT ' JACKETS Give him a cool iocket for work or leisure wear-we have them in satins, gobordines ond Needs. Assorted shades. Size: to 44 . . . . . ALL NICELY BOXED FREE. HAMBLY Gr INNIS MEN'S & IOYS' CLOTHING - 166 GT. GEO. ST. - PHONE 2754 Ei.Ei!5 ”' etc. Ei.EI!5 "P " srgsnr HORNE Morolzse.-. tII'i'6I'V.5Il7,l.l;'7". 0LDIN1C9i1lLC bulva .. ' fvlvicv mo ncwuonce, TMAMG some u. meal ." ;l'9.IEa'lEs HUN Mar PM .43.: To TAKI vou BACK Sport Echoes from Prince county Take a bow. Mark Delaney. what ever for? Well, Mark is now lead- "16 the very youniz summer has Town League in batting. He is the only batter hitting .500 at the present time. We know. it's like giving recognition to a arathon runner who breaks in fro t of the back just after the starting gun is fired, but we've decided to give you the leader in every column so we're starting with Mark. Don't make it too sweeping. Mark. A barely perceptible curtay will fill the bill this early in the season. 0 I 0 We're going to get the league executive to give us clear-cut reg- ulations for deciding the batting championship this year. We used to make it a requirement that the winner must have played in 60'';. of the total games played by his team. The trouble with this, the player might be only a plneh-hit- ter in a half-dozen games. There is the other aiternativeloi requir- ing so many times at bat. but this, too. is not fool proof, because it penalizes a batter who gets a large number of free passes to first. We think the best way is to take the number of times a batter faces a pitcher. You can't get that from the box score unless the names of those who walked are included and we guess that should be done. We'll let the executive decide just what will be necessary to qualify for the batting championship, however. We received. ffon; Father Dur- ney of Kentville official rules and regulations which govern the "Lit- tle Leagues" which Bill O'Connor told us about when he visited Bummerside. The "Little League" covers young players from the age of 8 to 12 years. The rules of play are well worked out and show a great deal of thought. For exam- ple, no pitcher can pitch more than nine innings a week. A game consists of six innings. Bad lang- uage during a game means the offender is thrown out. and the players must not ride opposing pitchers. This is really starting the kids right. . . . It is so very easy to forget the "good sportsmanship" angle when teaching young boys and girls; competitive games. The young- sters are easily. much too easily, sold on the idea that victory is the only thing that matters. and. in the fight for victory other things must be forgotten. We like to see the kids fight every inch of the way to win. and not to give up till the last man is out. But they should be warned that "cheatinr,:" in any shape or form, whether it':; smuggling in an over-age player. or in some other way, is strictly President Kent Street taboo. who wants a shabby vlc-I tory of that sort? We'd offer an award for the besti display of sportsmanship among the minor players, but we're a. bit doubtful if you could impartially pick out one player at the end of the season for this honor. You might be doing some other boys an injustice. The Hart trophy is of- fered in hockey. but there are the penalties to go by in that sport. We do intend to give examples of sportsmansiiip due publicity (men- tioning names) and we'll certain- ly blast unsportsmanllkc conduct (not mentioning names). I o a a . Some suspicious people will seek! to show a connection between our. getting around this giving ant award to the kids and the facin that our forefathers emigrated from the Isle of Skye, hilt if some- one will point out how this awardi You're lucky . . 0 Father's expecting Here's everything to delight his taste -- Beautifully woven fabrics- a wealth of patterns and designs - fhe tailoring 'of 'Canada's style leaders in Shirts. Pa- iamas. Ties. Handkerchiefs and Shorts. FATHER'S DAY June 17th. r " um Store. for MEN Charlottetown. P. E. I. could be fairly given. we'd be glad to make it. That's how important we think good sportsmanship is to those young players. O C U Llpilv Gaudet's d. an B girls won the first softball skirmish with the High School Royals, we have heard. The score was ii to 4. Th: ' Royals assure us that this was just a preliminary brush and that when they get a little more prac- tice, they'll give the Curran dc Brlgettes such a pasting that "Lippy" won't wait until the sev- enth inning to take them off the field. Personally, we think it will be a hard fought series when these teams meet for keeps in the play- We have the Dr. Grant trophy for the Town League's leading baitcr. Now if some sports-mind- . CHARLOTTETOWN DRIVING PARK AND PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION ASSOCIATION CANADA'S FINEST RACE TRACK a day. accommodation for over two llundre one hundred and fifty horse are enabled and awaiting the word. A new eight foot wire fence encircles the thirty six acres with five steel gates doing away with congestion of previous years. The catering Is under the ' capable management of Mr. Jack Edgeff. operator of the Born Drive Inn. , OLD HOME WEEK, AUGUST 13 to 18 Featuring the outstanding Live Stock Show in Eastern Canada: where you will see the finest parades of livestock in front of the Grandstand "Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday. The top harness llersesfrem Canada will be com- petlng. You will also see the best vaudeville obtainable. During Old Home Week the Main Grandstand will be reserved. Approximately 1400 seats. 60 He lseeretory. Announces the First Night Race For the T951 Racing Season Saturday, June 23 -- 8.30 p.m. Featuring the Free For All with the outstanding horses in the Mariiimes competing and six other Dashes with the cream of the horses making their first bid for victory in this. the first Night Race of the 1951 Season. Everything about the Plant has been put in spin and spun order for your pleasure and convenience. All Buildings are new excepting the Grandstand. the centre field has been levelled and reseeded a n d its carpet of green greatly adds to the splendid set up. The truck has b e on soft as velvet and lightning fast. The lighting system is one of the finest in Canada and the races are started with our fine mobile starting gate. A training track has been completed inside the centre field for the conven- ience of the horsemen. the llorsemen's canteen is new in operation. new toilet facilities for the horsemen and continuous hot water twenty four hours I Come and sea for yourself the improvements that have been made "during the past six months. "Dr. J. P. LANTZ. H. J. KENNEDY. - Vice Pros. I: Mgr; E. FRANK ACORN. Reee Secretary. Giff choosing is easy with Forsytll. cl horses. and at present over June 17th. rx 11214 Sff THE MARITIME " LII-'75 MAN ed merchant would offer a prize for the player who leads in 11312;. "Runs batted in" in a very un- gportant indication of ability arid deserves recognition. There are other departments of play that could be similarly recognized. resurfaced. 1-. 4:.-..;c-A -