L.“ -. 9;; W- “W. m, 10 The Guardian. Charlottetown, Fri. May 8. 1968. HUNTERS’ CORNER I Columnist Says Causeway Has Great Many Large Trout ‘in packed ‘rafts' and lining the shoreline in long. black win- drows. When flights would wing The month of May has usher- ed in and we still have thou- sands ofwildgeese with us.i May be they are loath to leave . down river their honking blend. the bounteous table wl ‘ into a single crescendo of unlimited quantities of w b e a t. :sound. From our vantage point. oats and barley, and again the-in the lea of an abandoned late spring may be the cause of farm building we watched them their delayed departure for the With the aid of field glasses for northern breeding groun It over two a y lmdlnzs m the. The stubble fields along t “Sub” the laymg geese begin river, on our side. were littered "‘0va Uorthward an”: A Prn‘with hundreds of bushels of oats 30m ~ J“ normal Sprmgs “I”: and barley. At approximately a 53- -b.“t the Present spmng quarter to five they began hedge “@500 IS away off the beam hopping to the fields adjoining “'“h. “5999‘ normalcy The the river. Methinks some plane “'9 15 hangmg 0“ to the 13,“ has given them a bit of a 'razz- E35 and some dams “9 sun ing‘. Twice when high flying we Clogged bl” to an appeal" planes passed by the birds on ances its about ready to disen- the water broke mm an angry ‘cgrale- , chorus and many took to w l n g The causeways are hangmg until the plane had passed. When on far later than usual and _me- the second plane made its hp. thinks that Earl ‘Dlver' R‘ggs pearance hundreds of geese were may6d It smart When he Insm' feeding on the stubble. Sudden-' uted its postponement until the 1y they took 0“ for the water Saturday and,5ur},day 0‘ May 11 honking th eir heads off. We and 12”“; ,“Dlver, ha? Show" ,3 thought for the moment that a lot of initiative in bringing this hoacher ' com?“ um) beluga“ this C01" I for sneak shot and then we heard “,mmSt “tends ms congratula' the plane. After the plane had tlons. It has created a lot .of-ln- ‘ passed out of Sight and hearing terest among the trout fishingvthe supper time flight to th fraternity and the general public 1 nearby stubble was resumed. also .watchmg. "5 outwme flock of crows that paid no at- wlth 1’ Slightly qukened Pulse- tention to the plane took off in W on win the Ist prize for the bad humour When a flock of biggest trout is the top priority . geese dmphed a m on g them “95””? at the moment? Its Without first requesting permis- morc likely to be a beginner. sion. as beginner's luck has more 0 it than just the mere quotation HARD TO ESTIMATE . . .it often works out that way. It was difficult to estimate the VERY BIG TROUT number of geese present in the This columnist is of the opin- portion of the river under ob- ion that the North River Cause‘ servation as wooded sections of wcy holds more large trout than river bank hid a lot and many even the Vernon counterpart and were resting on the sand close th:rc are real tackle busters in to the banks and were hidden this body of water. It has been by the black windrows resting officially verified that one trout on the bank itself. I placed the weighing close to the seven and number somewhere between two a half pound mark was shocked, thousand and twenty - five hun- tagged and released in the Northdred. I understand that a simi- River Causeway. I have also Iar concentration is located in been informed that this mark the Orwell . inette area and has since been broken when one another in Prince County in lfne weighing over nine pounds was DeSable - Victoria section. When tagged and released at North 3 geese are present in such heavy River Causeway in either 1961Iconcentrations where all or last season. I have been un-I 0 they want may be had by able to verify this officially butijust hedge - hopping from the anglers have told me that they‘water over the bank it has a have hooked into fish in thisltendency to cut down on the Causeway that simply took offzpoaching casualties. A poacher a the ’gh port until the Iine‘hesitates before shooting into a ran out. They never got even a 3 concentration of a thousand. or glimpse of the trout but the sen- more. wildgeese. They kick up 53mm W35 35 l 93' had h00k- . such a racket that everyone ed a rampaging steer in the Within a mile or further knows tail. The end was the same in whats afoot. Furthermore a lot any event. iof visitors drive to such a local- On Sunday afternoon Aprlllity just to feast their eyes on 23th my hunting and fiShing ‘ such a lovely sight and a poach- partner and I took a driveier feels too conspicuous when across the river to the Mermaid he busts things up and also has area to check on the number of tthe feeling he could be under, wildgeese still present with us. observation from such visitors.‘ It was a picture we‘ll neverlThey say its an ill wind that forget. . .it had to be witnessedtblows nobody good and often to be believed. From Doyle’|I~unharvested grain proves a life Cove to the mouth of the John-leaving boon to our wildlife. ston's River geese were every-j where. They were on the water Life of Riley this spring. Indians Bomb As; Yanks Blank Angels By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS keen advanced to within II/i‘ A grand slam home run games of the top with a 7-0 Woody Held was the big blow in shutout of the Angels at LosI a 15-6 victory for Cleveland In- Angeles on a grand slam homerl dians over Kansas C’ty Thurs- by young Joe Pepitone, the first FF 3‘ IN.B. Jockey I Cops Triple f Again Thurs. FORT ERIE. Ont. (CP) Young Ron Turcotte ow to lose races. The 22-year.old. who won his first race ever on April 9, 1962.. last. and his 1815i Nov. year to become Canada's lead- iilg rider, races Thursday and now has 29 victories to his credit for the first 20 days of the 22-day Fort Erie spring meeting. 5 winning percentage is het- . ter than 30 per cent. ling opened last April 8. He now has 16 more than his nearest ri- vals. Jim Fitzsimmons and Gordon La-noway. Turcotte's first win of the aft- ernoon was in e first event on Mrs. Frank Merrill Jr's ar- Run, a three-year-old filly which registered by five easy .lengths. He didn’t ride in the, second race. but won the third on Ed Seedlhouse's Flying Coun- ,tcss by half a length over Dew .Valley Farm's Our Danny. ; ‘I‘urcotte's mount in the fourth Jeremy Jacobs' Sum Certain. had been “News “Pilinished last of seven to Gard-Ithe million dollar Maple ‘iner Farms‘ Xerxes. With no mount in the fifth. Turcotte re- turned fresh and ready to do e battle in the sixth, but hillson to be picked on the all-star mount. Stafford Farms‘ lBricker, could only finish sec-i" ond ' ' ‘ arles Softley s Pipe lRand. However, Ron came back in the seventh with a win on ,Jay Em Stable‘s Miss Flint-i lstone to make it three for five. from fiand Falls, NB. just doesn't won “Other three “-—and there were repercussions. having! ridden 98 horses since the meet- SPORT ECHOESISlnaIIesi Field Since 1957 I By Norman Maodonald ‘ Summerside Bureau of The Guardian It Was Our Mistake . last Thursday‘s edition of copped Intermediate "C" hon- “‘Sport Echoes". we intended to 5 say one thing but said another I l O '1 Sorry. gentlemen. especially as the Albany St. Pats are i We said the Borden Nationals one of our favorite teams. W an Island Intermediate bad the honor of naming only hockey title. the only time two hockey teams. the Albany the feat was accomplished. We St. Pats and the enslngton imcant to say the only time this Silver Wings. The wings have year a Prince County hockey long since gone into the Land Iteam won an Island title. RCAF of Limbo. but the St. Pats still sports personalities informed us carry the name We tabbed :that the airforce had wan an In- them with. immediate “C” title a few years And those boys have a proud “back and an Albany fan re- record down through the years. minded us of the two occasions “Hook” Walsh and Card Cut- .when the Albany St. Pats had cliffe are two of their graduates. l E Mohovlichv Coming on hucn Tuesday. May 7. is the date of the Saint Dunstan's Univer- isity Booster Club banquet. and Ino doubt some Prince County .hockey followers will want to Isee and hear Frank Mahovlich, Leaf sports banquets. and should make a lot of the small fry happy. After all. it's kids who regard those hockey greats as their idols. The Booster Club of Saint Dunstan’s University is working to create some new scholarships for the university —for students who make at least one varsity team In hoc- Iwho. although no millionaire in .tlhe last Stanley Cup games. put ‘up a rich enough display all sea- key. football. or basketball. Sgt. ‘team. and still manage to keep one Report has it that the Big eye on the text books and "M" can make some dazzling achieve a minimum of 65 per. IIforays down the rhetoric trail c a1 3 r 0. The special father.son rate this money-making project is a is a new ingenious angle for good one. I in; out 13 hits for a 10-3 rout of Houston Colts at the Polo Grounds And So Is Gallivon ‘i Danny Galiivan will be the Enjoyment to pretty well as- So the Booster Club cause in be! There. were four National . . .guest speaker at the sports rim. 1 gaffes out ushte Lilli; Iner at RCAF station on May 18. Scheme—C mg" a - ' land tllis certainly is a highlight of ' Los Angeles at Philadelphia”‘ the occasmm sured at this function, but we regret that it will mark the final appearance of F0. Noel Hollie in the role of sports of- Our wildgeese sure lived vile,l Milwaukee at Cincinnati and San Francisco at Pittsburgh. Baltimore plays at Chicago in the American. l-Ield unloaded his grand slam- mer in the sixth inning of e game at Kansas City. featuring a wild attack which saw Indians send 11 men to the plate. Pcpitone accounted for five of Yankee's seven runs. Mickey Mantle the other two. Ford struck out 10 and walked one in pitching a four-hitter that extended his scoreless in- nings to 16. The Senators collected 13 hits in putting victories back-to-back for the first time this season. Besides Osborne‘s two homers. e .semblage whose attention was ficer. Noel, who has made a lot of friends among Summer- side’s sporting fraternity. goes to Ottawa as sports director, where we are confident his considerable talents in the realm of spo will assure lilm success in his new posit. ion. I We enjoyed the last airforce ‘sports dinner. but Gallivan will be the frosting on the cake. We remember vividly Danny's speaking at the last Summerside ILegion sportsmen's dinner. How Ihe held a mildly hilarious as- .not easy to hold. as other per- vformers discovered. A Great Comeback The feat of the Summerside spark ignited. and Charlie Bal. ,iiigh School volleyball team at tfigrsoggynseségrgdtfeggugjtt: ION“? Aumtonuw on Tuede victry and the championship of evening ranks With the best ex- the Town League. Iamples of getting off the floor Another such example we re- I to post a victory. member happened about fifteen Jim King also had one for thel The boys were down 2 games years ago in Summerside. Windy Senators. Frank Lary was thelto l in a best-of.five series, and Steele’s hockey team in a town jdown 10-2 in the next game, five league were down 8-1 at the end Charlie Neal lashed out fourjpoints from elimination when of the secgléd period. and won losing pitcher. straight singles in the victory over the Colts. Al Jack-. son was the winning pitcher. Susan McDonnell of Scarbor- ough. Ont.. and Dorothy How- arth of Saskatoon won silver medals in floor exercises and Ibalanc beam Gail Daley picked up her sec- ond bronze by finishing third in balanced beam. Miss Daley. 16, won a bronze in the women's all-round indi- vidual standing Wednesday and shared in a silver for the all- around team second pl ce with Misses McDonnell and Howarth. both also 16. and Leissa Krol. Hamilton-born 17-year-old now living ‘ 't. Miss Krol placed fifth in balanced beam Thursday. , respectively.. while another Saskath girl.‘ Metsolamong the ashes of defeat athe ga me. By JOHN CHANDLER LOUISVILLE. Ky. (APl—Car llfornla's favored Candy Spots. a loo-to-l outsider named In- vestor who got in on credit. and seven other three - year - old horses were named Thursday for the smallest Kentucky Derby field since 1957 The skimpy uted to the presence of three top contenders for the $125,000- added classic Saturday at Ohur. chill Downs, plus several com- petent contendu's. Rex Ellsworth’s Candy Spots. 8-to-5 favorite for the 89th derby at 1% es, and Greentreo Stable's No Robbery nevar have been beaten. Cain Hoy Stable's tivo-year-old of 1962, and hasn't lost a race this season. Never Bend is the 5-to-2 second choice. and No Robbery is third at 3- o- . But this didn't bother trainer Frank A. Stone. who couldn't produce $250 to enter Investor for his owner. J. J. Cherock of Watkins Glen, N.Y. ’Ilhe racing secretary had decided to close entries with eight horses after a delay of about 20 minutes when Stone got a long distance call through to Oherock. who guar- anteed the $250 entry fee. Now he must get up another $1.250 ore the derby post time of 5:30 p.m. EDT Saturday to start the colt. ALSO ENTERED Others named Thursday were John W. Galbreath’s Chateau- guay, Ambush Stable’a On My Honor, Patrice Jacobs' Bonjour. Is. J. Ridder’s Royal Tower and Walnut Hill Farms Gary Pet. All will carry 126 pounds. In addition to Candy Spots. njour, y Honor and. Royal Tower are California- bred. Investor was foal Maryland. title others in Ken- tu record. Hi Tuesday‘s derby trial won by Bonjour, and he finished next to last in a field of eight. He has won twice in 24 starts, earn- ing $4.4 Will. has a 6-2 record. including this year’s Santa ‘ and Florida derbies. He has $336,812. Never Bend, with a 13-10 rec- won I Tribe, Twins I Swap Hurlers Twins Thursday traded left- Vhander Jack Kralick to Cleve- ,land Indians for righthander IJim Perry in a straight swap .‘of pitchers. “ Kralick. who had a no-llitter lagainst Kansas City last year. Ils 1-4 this season. During i stay with Calvin Griffith’s club starting in September. 1959. his zrecord is 33.23. His record last I year was 12-11 with an earned run average of 3.85. Perry was 12-12 last year with an earned run average d 4 13 ST. PAUL (AIM—Minnesota Kralick said he didn't think the I the Twins would have made deal if he had gotten some runs his five starts this year. Sunler’s lodies’ ord, has banked $502,484 His big one this year was the Fla- Imingo at Hialeah. No Robbery. with a 50 mark. Iwon the Wood Memorial at Aqueduct. beating Boniour. DERBY LIST LOUISVILLE. Ky. (APl—The field for the 89th running of the Wear i Champion Told QUARANTINE ESKIMOS YELLOWKNIFE. N. W. T. 1(CPl—A quarantine has been imposed on Eskimos in the Cop- i To Arrange Bout NEW ORLEANS (AN—Jun- .ior welterweight champion er ;berto Cruz was told Thursday i I WEEKEND . COATS . SLIMS . RACK OF DRESSES l day which knocked the Athletic out of first place in the Amer- ican League. Boston Red Sox. wlmse game at Minnesota was postponed. moved six percentage points in front in the surprising AL race. he R d invade Kansas City tonight for a threegame les The champion New York Yan- of his major league career. and the 32nd major league shutout from the left arm of Whitey Ford. Larry Osborne unloaded two homers in the Washington Senators' 9-4 decision over the Tigers at Detroit. METS ROUT COLTS In the National League. the lowly but liv-sly New York Mets ‘permine area of the Northwest ‘ to arrange a title fight with Ed- I lTerritories. inside the Arctic Idie Perkins of Chicago withinI .Circ e, to prevent sprea ofjfio days or else. lmeasles. the public health de-i Emile Bruneau of New Orle- partment here said Wednesday. I-ails. head of the World Boxin The department said it did notIAssociation's world champion- Ianticipate an emergency. 'I‘lio;ship committee. said if Cruz .quarantlne was to keep measles- ldoesn’t follow instructions the susceptible Eskimos from mov- I committee “will take steps to—. ing to their summer camps and ward withdrawing recognition Great George Street n his title. 2070 to 1/3 on: SUNTER’S LADIES’ WEAR also got the hitting fever. pound. . spreading the disease. ARANCHES: HALIFAX - SAINT JOHN o MARITIME Can you afford $500 for this MARITIME HOSPITAL SERVICE ASSOCIATION FREDERICTON o CHARLOTTETOWN 0 emergency 2’ ATA MOMENILIKBTHISyonshouldn‘tevcnhavetostopandfllinkabontR. With Blue Shield-Blqu'OIComprehenaivamgeyoldon'thawto. Blmstdeld-Bhleaosspapyoordocton'bilhandanymgicatmtsmityand medicalbills...inchidingdocton’cansatthoodice,homeorhospitsl; and provides forasemi-prlvatomominahospitalormakeuliberalallowancs mmdsopiimmmuoqobomdnmrmmheqmmu Shield- BlmCmsstahumofthehmkememberfinanymm... It’s wonderful to be cared for Want to team all the advantages of Blue Shield-Blue Cross membership? Just call your area enrollment specialist or us your employer. BLUI CHIILD- ‘ + ILUI onoso SPECIALS . SUITS Charlottetown 'iield is hurls 6. Never Bend Ycaza 7. No Robbery Rots 3-1 All 8. On My Honor Frey 30-1I 9. Candy Spots Shoemaker 6-5l nine Gross value: net. $ . Owners: 1. John w. Gal- third. $5.000 Slated For Kentucky Derby $125.000-added Kentucky Derby. 11/4 miles. Saturday at Church- Do as: carry 126 pounds starters; $108,900 to win. 25000 to second. 312.500 to 11. PP Horse Jockey Oddsi to tom 1. Chateaugay Baeza 154 breath; 2. J. J. Cherock: 3. Post time: 5:30 p.11), EDT. 2. Investor Callico 100-1 Patrice Jacobs; 4. B. J Rid- Television. M pm. EU! 3- Bonlour Valenzuela 12-1 er; 5. Walnut Hill Farms; 6. (CBS) 4. Royal Tower Hernandez 50-1 Cain Hoy Stable: 7. Gi-eentreel ' . . . 5. Gray Pet omez 20-1 Stable; 8. Ambush Stable; 9.} Radlo- 5.15545 D-m. EDT 5-2 Rex C. Ellsworth. . (CBS). Never Bend was the champion x $151,400 with ' 7w var—n nuwm NM»N“?"_ gyfl<lVT cky. ‘ ' In all the long series of racesi '- menu .1 Nig—Jaooqu’ooofi-mmmmgi‘ HEAD OFFICE: IONCTON. NEW BRUNSWICK ST. JOHN'S “I If you can lift a finger you can start the new Lawn-Boy Exclusive Finger-Tip Start Reduces Starting Efi'ort 94% The 1963 Lawn-Boy is as easy to start as drawing a. window blind. Lawn-Boy engineers have designed a new ignition system and geared starter that reduces starting effort an incredible 94%. Finger-Tip start is just one of many ways the new Lawn-Boy gives you your money’s worth—here are some others: ngh‘twelght. Lawn-Boy is easier to push than conventional steel power mowers because Lawn-Boy is made of magnesium, a metal lighter than steel. It is unusually tough and is rust-proof. Unlqus Grasscatchsr. Lawn-Boy's Chute & Bag Grasscatcher vacuum cleans your lawn as you cut. eliminates raking. It’s clog-proof ; holds a. bushelful; detaches and empties in seconds. 2-speed Mowing. Lawn-Boy has 2- speed throttle control. High speed for tough cutting, low speed for quieter. more economical normal cutting. New “D” Englno. Lawn-Boy’s new en- gine has 3 horsepower (working horse- power, not bench-rated horsepower). It will even cut through wet; grass without stalling. ‘ 2-Year Warranty. 24 months against defective parts and workmanship. Let your Lawn-Boy Dealer show you the new Lawn-Boy soon, see for your- self why it’s Canada’s best-selling power mower. 5 models to choose from. CANADA’S MOST POPULAR LAWN MOWER LAWN-BOY A DIVISION 0" OUTBOARD HARM CORPORATION OF CANADA LTII. Petal-harm Canada cram HOLMAN'S OF P.E.I. DISTRIBUTOR FOR P.E.|. Summerside 181 GreerGeorgeSn-eu FIRESTONE HOME & IiUTO CO. LTD. Charlottetown K000397000 DOUGLAS BROS. & JONES INC. Charlottetown .____ JohnStrod MURRAY WHITE SALES and SERVICE Charlottetown cpmuuoouumuuu