[land Crossing the marsh I noted; WIIEIE geese had been feeding ear-] lier in the spring but figured the droppings were close to I week old. Tli-is didn't look Back Siretch To Elie interest flint is be-told GI-org: -Sale in New York I-nites and Canadian tracks. He was-‘ ins taken 111 fins meeting. l10l‘~iNOVembeY. 1913. tor the opinion that the ham. miii (C I. ued F P M 1595 W€1'€ 9’-XP1‘t35S€d in “Om CHH As a rcsiilt. I brought liornelbe ready for the proposed Nov- ,on.in ., 1'. ~- ‘ ' 5 i i ‘ - . _ . . . _. . _ , ‘ml all.‘ lforma. and among the drivers the little t.rot.tm~g mare whichtcmber 11 opening date. w1t.licon.5ideI‘aihle anxiety. [little as 25 cents for 3 day! my weighs in the vicinity of lltll 1-, ge _i -_ ‘ gh d _ it . - as - ~- _ , . . . sni Dounds when ready for the fray-lllfleondtigcre lIl:l1.§H:}rl‘l!'§(’) (fliikejyigslwas re named The Rem“ Gm ‘ Her ambmnm 83 “ ‘v0“n‘gSm' work on a Saturday hohday H" Hr. :rEn_'§ comes ', M so-I-iiyyyi,2. 135s "The Guardian Page 9 Retirement Doesn't End ‘ii The Urge To P i"‘-wilrl:ec~t> are on full rations‘ 1,3, spring and this is in sharp‘, “gtrast to the near starvation‘ itions that existed on this; to last year-ice sealed flats! 9% estuaries and snow covercdl | ‘ 5. This spring geese have the .§ice of stubble. meadows or '!"§ter cured refuse potatoes that e left in the fields last fall. gse are very fond of the dried 2 starchy content to which po- '3pes are reduced come spring. ‘ubjectcd to undue punishment lqtgthe stubble and meadows they We the choice of feeding in com- 'l3g-ative safety on the tid-al flats. "553 who take a chance on in- , marshes and fields run con- 1- Cqerable risk. “Ts passing strange how the ,2 of shotgun shells has step- :”°g Lhp this _ast few weeks af- ‘-.~ 3 winters lull. Clerks behind ll‘: Counter tell me its nothing “usual for a customer to step heavy loads without batting Pilteye. Size of shot requested I s from No. 2. to triple. A. ere is nothing furtive in their ; inner. some even joke about ; Lying a spring goose lined up. ‘at hunting has been taboo since \ri-1 ushered in and was for ne weeks before. An exicuse * and order two boxes of 3‘: Investigate window. Suddenly I was wide a- wake as Judson's Island popped into my mind. There was a rea- son for this. J-udson's Island is '‘0ll.‘ll11y 81 mile past T. Hill and I was past that way on Friday. A D115 of seaweed on the bar looked from the liighway as if it had had a face lifting although one couldn't. be certain with the naked eye at a distance of close to half a mile. ty flat. after a winter‘: rain and snow but, this pile put me in mind of an oversize haiycock: Another little incident had made me sus- picious. On Monday evening, March -3151. I was on the Rifle Range marsh checking on the pairs of black ducks present when a flock of eight wildgeese round- ed Squaw Point coming from the Hillsboro River direction. Ordin- arily they'd have cut across the marshy tract inside the Island but I noticed as they drew near the Bar they ‘kicked otf’ and a- lighted about 400 yards off the bar tip. All these incidents kept running through my mind as I ate breakfast and for my own peace of mind I decided to go out and have a look-see and be back in time for morning Church service. - good as geese make a practice and “lat should “fill? him Nil-;thei'e with 10 head, and Piercel of feeding along this shore every."0“’ that he has declded 10 lfylchappell, a former Maritimer spring and do not leave without his skin at d1'iVl'n‘¥5 harness h01"‘wh-ose home is now in Bangor, reason. The seaweed pile had- 595- H9 was slated to be “=9 b€"Maine, has expressed in with 17 been trimmed up till it was aboutlhmd Noble Adiofia 3- 159 1-5, in}h.ea.d that had been racing in‘ the height of a man. A hunter 3 race at Santa Anita 315‘ W€ek;7 California. coma 11¢ in it and be Semi per. ‘Trainer-driver Del Miller, who‘ pendicula-r and in good position shares ownership with him in a for a shot. seaweed is tops ssicmlple of race horses. arranged camouflauagc. A hunter can be exposed and not spotted unless he moves. I wasn’t interested in the sea- weed pile. My hunch had been tcorrect. Two men had been on Seaweed settles and looks pret-‘the Bar that morning—around daybreak I figured. The.tide was due to recede shortly before row cross str-ips on the sole. y the switch. ‘i daybreak and I observed where one had walked on we‘. sand and 1 foot below high tide mark. One foot print was long and rather narrow—a size 11 at least. It was a distinctive foot mark. On the sole were three crescent shaped grips about an inch and a half apart. Each consisted of a solid strip of rubber approx a quarter inch wide and the same in depth. The other was a No. 8 with nar- ‘and among the drivers who will It was the second trip to the Bar this spring for Elephant Foot and the second, possibly the 3rd, for No. 8. The smaller person had walked through the woods and apparently had left the 15- land. No. 11 could still have been The brand-new half mile track at. Rockingliam Park, Salem,’ New Hampshire, staged its first program last night. Morning workouts during the past three weeks have shown good clockings by the upwards of 400 horses stabled there. They have moved‘ in from Florida, North Carolina and several other training tracks, compete are Billy Hauighton and Johnny Simspon. ‘ The new track will cost the owners over $600,000 for improve- ments. Located on it is a club- house built in 1956 that cost a million dollars and is kept hea- ted so as to make it most com- ilortable for occ-uipants. The track and stables have been fully light- ed, and a $75,000 press box is located on the roof of the grand- stand, with quarters for racing officials on -the finish line. A new electronic telemeter will flash the time when the first horse’s nose hits the wire. It will also give The writer was very pleased to receive in the mail yesterday, a letter from J. Alfred Valentine, executive vice-president and gen- eral manager of Roosevelt Race- way, Westbury, Long Island, en- closing an official pass for Roose- velt Raceway, season of 1958. We are grateful to our friend, Mr. Valentine, for his kind thought-‘ fullness: Roosevelt Ra-ceway had its first. race program of the season on Tuesday night, A-pril 1. The $20,000,000 track showed its pop- ularity by drawing over 32,000 fans to its confines despite the none-too-pleasant weather 't h a t prevailed. The pari-mutuels set a new opening night record, with almost $2,000.000 passing through the iron men. while they -are racing in New York, they have concluded at Santa Anita, and despite the bad weather in California, they set a new season’s record. Tomorrow afternoon. racing starts at Blue Bonnets, Montreal, and will con- tinue there, and at Richelieu, for 200 nights. 1-—Percy's dad got the better of, the deal. too. We. are glad to note that our friend. A.D. Napke, Newcastle, N.B., is again sponsoring a $3,- 000 early-closing program to be racel on July I at Chatham, N. B. This program has been a N.B., is again sponsoring a $3,- 000 early-closing program to be raced on July 1 at Chatham, N. B. This program has been .3 great drawing card through the years, and every horseman who has shotpilmd there has been pleas- ed with the treatment received. The No. 1 event is the $1,500 Mirima-chi 9th Renewal Early - ‘_Closer for horses that have not won $100 or more at either gait. No 2 is s free-for-all trot and pace, purse $700. No 3 is a trot and pace, two dashes, purse $450. ' No 4 is a trot and pace, two d-ashes, purse~$350. Nominations for the Mirimaclii. early-closer should be forwarded on or before April 15. IN BERMUDA Dr. Stan Terceira writes from Bermuda that Mr. Walter Gib- bons, the new manager of the Bermuda Jockey Club. has paid another visit there for several days and was glad that. the man- agement had acquired a large piece of adjoining property that will permit the building of new Billy llaiight.oii, as our rnarlors are well aware, has been the top. money-winning driver of the har- ness horse racing world for the past three years, averaging over a half a million dollars annual- ly. What is not well known is that his handsome young wife, Dorothy Haughton, loves horses and has been around them all her life. Her father was a judge at har- ness horse race tracks. and that is why Dorothy early learned a lot about horses. At the night racing contests, she is always present,,_if possible, and other wives of drivers get together with her and wa-tch the contests was to be a veterinarian, but her: mother objected and she became‘ a lab technician, and was at that occuipation when she ‘met Bill. Now she just takes care of the; kids, entertains the owners, goes to the races every night, and lis- tens to the drivers run their rac- es over and over again. Whe 11 her hubby gets shorthanded. she helps train the horses, and Bill says: “She can, too.” At: 34, Bill has been driving hor- ses for 17 years. His first start was at a county fair when he was in High School. From the time he was eight years old. he picked up sipare money working around on farms,’ often for as interest in horses caused his fa- ther to send him to the Coble- skill Ag-ricul-tural College. and during the summer vacations, he worked on farms. . His first job with horses was grooming them, and his wages were one dollar a day. He be- came a full-time trainer and driv- er ln 1947, and was leading driv- er at Saratoigia Racewayln 1949. That fall he ended with 18 hors- es. Since -he Roosevelt, up to the beginning of. this campaign, he has won over $3,000,000 and has been leading mon-evy - winner among U.S.T.A. drivers several times. KEY KIDDIES! You can have a FINA JET SCOO:|_' ER ASK DAD! O O O started racing at, in the woods. Dried grasses and tunf left no foot prints. N0 EVIDENCE EC No evidence was unearthed that denoted any geese had been killed nor were any empty shells found. Seldom do poa-chers leave empty shells lying around if they have an opportunity to pick them up. The point is: whoa would any barns and other improvements. He said that it would-be easy to get sufficient United States hor- ses to race there, because so many of them are sent South for winter training in the US. In Benm-uda, they will have a chance to race and make some money. The new stables will sic- the time for quarters. IS ATTRACTION Eight dashes are carded, with the races starting at 8.00 p.m. it one was aifter crows or fox- cut, no ice in my book when has on the rounds. BTINCT Vhen one has spent. the best rt of ones life connected with me law enforcement work one often guided by an instinctive to go some place. It sud- BUT.!! As I paced tip my knee length gum “rubbers my wife queried: “Where are you going?” “Out to Judson’s Island to have a look around”. “What are you worry- ing about any place now for?” “I’m not worrying bu-t I have an idea there's something going on Goon PI-CKER, Everyone can pa1'tioipa.to Percy Gray of Prividence. R.. 1., has, with his brothers, beeni among the most successful pick-l ers of promising harness horse yearlings and are now promi- nent breeders. He recently turned down an of- Here you'll find the finest in petroleum products and tires, batteries‘ and accessories. Here too. yo1i’ll get quick, friendly personal service, the kind Lloyd’s Fina Service feels you deserve. scheme to win it FINA JET SCOOTER! Details at our Station. . . in our but like the flock of 8 they were not interested in the Island ex- cept in giving it a wide berth. It: was a simple procedure to [ugly pops int.o ones mind and Q thought persists. It comes in yet at times. Last ‘Sunday [I . . fimmg for instance I awoke ' ‘éxtly before seven with the sun there and want to check and see how right or wrong I ah" I ad- ded: “The walk will do me good in any case”. I walked the approx the third $ > N» ;§,;-TUESDAY, M de ~. - seat ining brightly in the bedroom previous occasions. of a mile from pavement to Is- APRIL 1_5’rh I FREE Get -Your Fishing Gear and Outfits Ready persons be doing around a lonely point like this at Daybreak on Easter Sunday morning and on The geese gave me all‘ the answer I need- ed. 24 flew past in a long string identify Elephant Foot. I'd al- vise him the next time he roatms around the shore under suspic- ious circumstances to pull -a Ro- binson Cruso and go bare foot- ed. TROUT FISHING CONTEST RULES Weather parmiting. the Trout Fishing Contest take place opening day, April 15th. . Judging will take place at 12 o’clock noon, Wednesday, April 16th. All contestants will kindly have their trout placed neatly in trays or platters for display, which will be in the Guardian- Patriot building windows on Prince Street. tnade with Percy’s father at an fer of $50,000 for nine exception- ally wall<bred foals. The Gray faim-ily has been connected with harness horses for upwards of/60 years, and the writer made a THE PATRIOT’S ANNUAL ” CONTEST RULES JUDGES The judges will be Mr. Ralph Jenkins, President of the Fish and Game Association; Mr. Bruce Wonnacott, Mr. Frank Acorn and Mr. E. K. MacNutt. PRIZE DISTRIBUTION (One prize only t,o each winner) First and second prizes in cash -—largest trout. Judge by weight. For the best and cleanest trout in the heavyweight class (1 lb. or over). Best group of three trout (10 commodate between 100 and 150 horses. He also says that it will be necessary to reverse the for- mer clockwise running of horses and change to the counterclock- wise method usod on United Sta- lnches or over). Best catch of ten (10) trout or over . . within lawful limit. First and second prizes In cash for all classes. Lawrence Gulf. branch of the Bay of Fundy. A famous salmon stream, the Jupiter-River flo-wis 60 miles on the Island of Antlcosbi in the St. World’s highest tides, some- times Iieaicihing 53 feet, funnel into the Minas Basin, the eaztern 115 ELM AVENUE LLOYD'S FINA SERVICE DIAL 4326 ISHING CONTEST TUESDAY, APRIL 151-h AFISHING LET'S G00 Everything for the successful fishermen. Rod, reels, lines, baskets, landing nets, hooks, flies. lures, etc. Highest quulil-y—lowesf prices. I 3 pieces $3.49 Cane Fishing Rods Spinning Rod, . 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