APRIL1_16'._.1949___ ' min-n; nook lssssnfrl " a l A '1' _ A E A S T E R ‘WEAR ouaror OUILNIW GABARDINE SUITS AND ror-_ COATS AND s: WELL onsssso. ’ O GAIARDINE SUITS v Fine English, Yarn SUITS In Fawns. Tans. Blues. Green In Greys. Browns and-Glen and Dark Brown Check. i u 55.00 to 65.00 35.00/01 69.50 SHIRTS NEOKWEAR HATS Plain and Fancy Stripes AH the new Panel effects. "d 5.00 to 10.00 2.75 to 7.50 1.00 to 2.50 SEE THE NEW RING CROSBY "IJAOKETS KELLY s. MaelNNlS 135 Gt. Geo. St. ' ” Phone I41 ---=1..~.._._.._._.. MILLVIEWMILL rolls Under "The Game Act 1937" Mil-lview Mill Pond is "En- closed Property", consequently it is unlawful for any perlon or persons to fish in the some without the consent of the owner. , PALMER 8r HASLAM Solicitors. ' nit, no-elun game on opening day when he turned back the Ohlcago White 50x nine years ago today. The sox came close to scoring in the third inning when they had the IJBS€5 loaded with two out, but Feller struck out the next man. REMEMBER WIIEII -—-.- By The Canadian Pres Bob Feller, iamous a Cleveland Irldlalas .1 ‘ . became the first major-league hiurler to pitch a no- JACKET The sensational new Papa Jasllet has everything any Ian or hey wants In a sport lacltet . . . colossal Calliornia _ styling . . . the Rneat Rlegel fabric . . . King Street galsar- dinel The great new ali- lnspired by aim: ' , CIIIISBY Wnestller Pepe Jacket mllgnl: IN HIS LATEST - ainumf. fglimhlueRer PARAMOUNT H" g years ‘and years of weari 0e yours today. - , . TIIE EMPEROR WAlTl" st: I lliil AT 100R lirlnsomloon THEATRE ____ THE GUARDIAN, Back Stretch (Continued from Page ill 5°11!) 1-1-2. Bainey G. Henley (By-my) 0-4-1. ‘Ii-seer Hanover 43PM") 3-34. three other start- trs. beet time 2.09 8-4 by Jane Awfl’. owned by 0. H. Horton, Mur- Fly River. Four Year Old Futurity -Hill|ide Scott (J. Conroy) 1-1-1, Little Audrey (Kelly) 2-2-2. three other starters. beet time 2.16 1-2. The winner was owned by J. A. Kerr, Truro, N. S. _ The fourth and final day's rac- lhl showed the following winners —Two Year Old Futurity - Lusty‘; First (Schuman) 1-1; Dorothy Ab- be“ (M17917) 3-3. Wait N'See (MacDonald) 4-3. Kelly's Night. mare (Kelly) 3-4, Miss Brewer (Po ) H. beat time, 2.34 1.4, The inner was owned by G. 1". Bennett. Charlottetown. Two Year Old Pace -- Hilda Budlong (Sem- lllc) 1-1. Bonnie Budlong (Cflmp- bell) 2-2. Jack Clyde (Callbeck) 3-3. Raymond Budlong (J. O'Brien) 4-4. two other starters, best time 2.20 1-4 -- a new Maritime record 1°? l-Wfl-ires-r-old pscers and pro- blbly still standing. Free For All Trot — Alloway (Rylan) 3-1-1, 1-151 Britten (Maclldillan). 1-3-3, Mllllg Kalrnuck (Kelly) 2-2-2. six other starters. time. 2.0a 1-4, 2m 3.4 (g new track record) 2.08. The win. "1118 horse was owned by Robert Ryfln- Hvulton. Maine. 2.14 Trot and Pace - Dudey Patch (Mac. Millarl) 1-2-1. Aaron L. (J. O'Brien) 3-1-3. Ben Ton (Sanderson) 9-34, Vests. Bars (Morrison) 4-4.4, "m, 3-08 1-2. 2.0-1 1-4. 2.01 a-s. The iii-at heat was the fastest paced during u" mssllns. The winning horse was owned by the New Q1 Community Club. wow The lvmse time oi the oi heats Mood was 2.10 1-4. (The average time of the 20 heats paced the previous year was 2.09 3-4.) There were ten heats trotted during the meellrls. the fastest being the 2.07 3-4 oi Alloway and the “u”, time of the ten heats was 2.12 1-4. Th‘ n" 1°? 19151118 driver ended in a.‘ tie for points with Tyndall Sample and Joe O'Brien tops. The above was the beginning of Old Home bVei/reek and the writer well remain s start out . Iiderable tropidagn earlymitll‘ m l“! ""1"" lllnatures irons citizens “WYQBIQ l0 hevlnx such a meet- ing. Tho first one we called on was the Hon. George D. DeBlols, and I-llcr wnlslnmr that it would be t 1°" W118 to hen up the spirits l’; “l0 900916 by giving a program ° ‘"1118 and vaudeville, he put 4W" "l6 Potent name of the firm —DeBlois Bros. Next on the list W19 CI-rveil Broa, then we had teams go out and we ended up with 0W1‘ a thousand signatures and Old Home Week was born, with the slogan —- Be it ever so humble, ‘Mu! 11° Place like Home! The fastest mile worked by a We ‘ven- old this year wag by Ssras Comet by Scotland's Com. ot- l-ler time was 2:18 8-5. last m" i=1 1105- lest qiiarter in s2 5900MB. over the Ben White Race- WIY. Orlando, Florida. The filly 18 med by c. '1'. Black and has been liven all her training by the ex-Maritime reinamsmhri Avery. Rm“! Mmtrens has arrived Bl R-lfllsllw Raceway. Morltreal. with titres norm b‘ _,'ng to '1‘, E- Hlllklllwll. Middleton. N. B. They are Jerry Orsttan 2:12. Jim i113. and Billy P. 0. Parker 2:14. These horses raced well over Duf- ierln Park. Toronto, this past four months. Later on they will move to the Maritimes. Racing starts at the Richelieu track, Montreal. this afternoon. ‘R10 Joe O'Brien stable shipped Gilt of Orlando, Florida. ycsterdav for Roosevelt Raceway. N. Y. Latest workouts were: Fan Dan- cer (2) in 2:20. last quarter in 32 2-5 seconds: Little Brown G. 211716} Gene Abbe in 2:15 2-5; Lauanns Hanover (3) and Rall- dol-ph (S) in 2:17 3-5, last quarter in 92 8-5; Calumet Echo (2) in 2:20: WerMsster 1n 2:29. This horse il bllnl taken along artsy with the hope that he will prove er better than two minute pacer later. Joe gave him a 2:02 2-5 - record last year. y, llunters‘ turner Continued from Page 0 ‘tawniesfi I'm afraid they'll have to dig a new excuse. With tra- vel my. ticna what they were, poachers felt reasonably sale Irom sinprehension. O O I qr Wednesday evening oi this week 1 was roaming around a couple o! miles up the Morell river near a spot known as the ‘Rad Ban-k‘. In short I was playing a gens; oi hide and R0 we’! with a p1.‘ oi trout ilshermcn who beat the gun. I don't think that they were aware of mo! Presence. They were on the 09908196 5W9 °l the river when first spotted and the game was eventually called on account of darkness. The fisher- men were not the only poachers en the move. As the last light of qqy (glad, and th; curtain of n13“ hung suspended ior a few short minutes. irosn iar u? flvll’. somewhere between the Salmon hatchery and Mooneys bridge “m; thy heavy crump oi a 10- geug, . . . one single shot a good mile distant and then mal- lowed by distance came the muted cadence oi wild geese on will!- Ivan as I stood and listened, tram my lett somewhere near U15 mouth of the llorell, I heard a taint paella, bucks. wake. sucks. nlwke . .. . five quick evenly spaced shots. Someone, with e mllltr touch was playing a tune on a pump or an automatic shotgun. ‘more was riotilln; much I could about it at the moment ea first... descetldld in “IBM 59' .ed the year before which would fore I sot to when I had parked the oar. Later the moon osme up, but by that tine the posdser would hay, gone home even t! I knew the enact locational the shots. To really iind out what is going on in the chock districts one has to prowl around at all hours and iind out for one’! sell. . O O O There's too much of t sort of thing going on. One iton hears this excuse, "Why rev; the birds for the Americans . . . . they get ‘em when they so south". ‘Iltats just so much salve for their con- science . it they have any. ‘The Prairie chicken, pheasants, Rufied grouse and Huns don't go south to the Yankees and yet they set it when the opportunity oi- iers. in season or out, as well es the ‘geese and dutts. Evidence keeps piling n: that the Prairie chicken released four or five years ago would have made the grade ii they hsnd't been kill- ed off by unscrupulous poachers. I have it from men who hunted those birds in the West that Prair- le chicken can be very stupid on occasions. They'll sit an a stock looking as big u turkeys with their necks stuck up straight and motionless and let a gunner walk up to them and blaze sway. when one gets quite close they'll oiten puff their feathers out and minke themselves look blsssr than they really are. Aster they are tired at the survivors will make ior the nearest poplar blutf. It they alight on trees, one may walk up to them and pick them oif at leisure. Whole covey: are sometimes wiped out in this manner. O O O Three years ago 1 received re- ports about a-oovey of 10 Prairie chicken being wiped out, with the exception oi one bird. at Orwell Cove. I was inclined to take this with s. grain oi salt until 1 learn- od snore about the chickenk liab- its, ‘and furthermore I wasn't really certain that there were any Prairie chicken on the rounds. I lcnow dif- ferently now. On Monday evening of this week I had a long chat with Donald John McKenzie, Orwell Oove. O O O I was on the prowl as usual and came upon him as he was split- ting wood at the 9d“ of his wood- lot near the bank oi’ Peril-so creek. The evening sun was glint- ing on tbs heavy beech woods that lined the ridge to the south as we sat and talked. I have always found Donald John absolutely re- liable. I asked him about e11. story of a flock of-Preirie chicken be- ing in the Dove. He told me that was correct. A oovey oi 1D .... two oovcys had joined up in his opinion. Questioned as to how he knew that they were chicken. he told me that they were bigger than Rui-fed grouse, lighter col- oured necks and walked straight with sharp pointed tails also stuck up and that their legs were feathered right to the toes. - O O O Now that description could have easily been taken iron-L a book but he added something else that proved to mo that his description came irom class and minute aervatlon, not that I doubted him in the first instance. He said this: "may didn't act like Hun: and would hide when they sew you coming, they'd stand and look at you and when one got quite near they'd rufiie up their ielthcrs." O O I His story of the incident of the shooting is as follows: ‘The birds were around all surnmer and early tall. They ied mostly in Jimmie Jentclns’ grain field on the Irving Road. Three years ago on. Septem- ber 90th., the day before th, Hull season opened. two men in a car drove down the road and stopped when they saw the birds in the field. They tired into them on the ground and then followed them into the woods and began shooting them off tho trees. Thoy were quite some distance away. Alter awhile I started dorm to get the lumber of the car. One of them saw me coming and they both got in the car and drove away. I only saw one Prairie chicken afterward. it stayed all winter but leit some. time in March." O O O Last year I received a report that a covey oi seven birds, be- lleved to be Prairie Chicken, were wiped out by gunners in the Lorne Valley district in Kings County. This was alleged to have happen- mske it two years ago. Whether or not them are any Prairie chick- cn left in the province I have no way of knowing at present. A bird has to be able to look out for it- self in this country. Til-sis the reason we have so ma!!! Hunl. I I O Any persons who would deliber- ately wipe out a covey of birds struggling to obtain a ioothold in the province an milling but vandals. They didn't even have the excuse that they didn't know what they were for it was close season on 1-lurls and all upland game. Any hunter convicted of In offence oi this nature should have his hunting license cancelled ior at least five years. Th. Orwell Oove incident may well have made the dlflerencs between success and failure regarding the importation oi Prairie Chicken to this PW!- lnce. . . _ The institution oi National wildlife Week and talks on the radio are well and good. Both serve a useful and educational purpose, but what we do need is more drastic penalties ill-posed on persons convicted oi aslne viola- lions, penalties that would include cancellation of their hunting lio- enoe if the nature of the oiilence warranted same. The lllllllll "l" eriowl census conducted in Osn- ‘ada and the ltetts lest winter showed that Canada geese made a substantial increase. This has been attributed by some obstvsrs to United States lnsltutrd stricter conservation measures in respect to Osneda geese wlntenm in the tn, fact that three years ago the . amass ur F0li EASTER SllIlWERPRO0F 00ATS A large selection to choose from-including popular English navy gabordine burberry-single and double breasted models I I —slash pockets, military styles, 8 To long wearing. and smart looking SPORT 00ATS and JACKETS New Spring and Summer sport coats in stock now shown in Harris Tweed: -— glen checks — covert cloths and poles- look smart and feel comfortable in a a _ . Up new sport coat-priced front A large selection of men's summer jackets now in stock, shorlrskin - poplin — satin and ctavenett materials, also the new Bing Crosby jackets. Ali sizes, ’ 6 assorted shades, prices a Up DRESS SIIIRTS We are showing the largest selection of fine dross sitirts in town syth — Brill — Fonden, etc. New plain shades or, fancy patterns. or fancy patterns. All sizes from 14 to 18 1-2. Prices ‘ -— oil popular makes For- All sizes from l4 to 181-2. .... 2.95 3.95 4.95 U, sronr SHIRTS ' lPlllllfi HATS Geiwin F F its b Al-I N ‘ A wide range to choose from-including ’ shades ‘andurstyres all pops: fancy plaids - checks and plain cherish. l" 9W7‘. browns and blues. broadcloth, rayon and all woois m, .. 5.55.. 5.50 "W" “m” -- U» wooLs ' ........ ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF IOYS‘ AND YOUTHS‘ CLOTH- ING AT POPULAR PRICES- USE OUR CONVENIENT LAY AWAY PLAN— PAY WEEKLY The Greendal Co. Ltd. MEN'S AND IOYS‘ WEAR I 144 51', 559, 51-, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . saIOOO PAGE SEVEN I. E '1‘ . THE ROGERS HARDWARE comrllril LIMITED GET [YOU READY tor trout fishing ‘ Our stock is large and of great variety to select We have a fair amount of English equipment. One item you will require for the opening day — BAIT HOOKS-- We have them. ~ BAIT LINES BASKETS FLY LINES ' SINKERS , FLY sooxs . CASTS ' FLOATS FLY IOXBS STREAMERS REELS LINE DRESSING SPINNERS < .RODS LANDING NETS . For later on—the best English Flies. Turn down eye-Hollow ground‘hook. COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER TllE ROGERS HARDWARE 00. LTO. PIIIIIIE 105 or 1300 "out: BOARDING HOUSE MAJOR lloorals‘ 5cm, MARTHA! voustleerz AT , ‘ M‘! EFFOQT AS il= 1T werze A u CHILD'S. GAME OF JACKGI- . IF You Reauzeo l-iow MUCH SCIENCE, Psvcl-ioLoeY, MusiC. , LOGIC, Pl-llLOSOPl-W, LireRnizq si<lLL AND SALES Am I'M comPouunlne INTO ‘rt-us LABOR, _ . YOU'D eAsP! ~ "L ' lf/E/ AQEM“? YOU THE "(YCOON WHO ./ was scooame Mil-MOMS our p? o: AN one MiNE LA$T WEEK? g; nor-AND NOW A TOOTHPAS-TE SLOGAN CONTEIsTw TELLIPQG Fence new TO ‘use? THAT n, SNAP ltd vow: MAP ./--- SAY, T.‘D BeTTc-zlz time Your: KNOB Raven! lane other southern ltstes.