HUNTERS' CORNER Run Of Sea Trout Behind - Schedule Oh The run of sea trout is behind schedule this season... a good three weeks according to observers. Be that as it may the sea-green le- gions are moving up in massed formation at the moment. The sea- sonal exodus from the briny's depths is behind time this year in not days but weeks. The season is late in other ways... the country- Iide looks typically June-not July- and maybe the trout are keeping in tune with the season. We can only guess at what governs the periodic trout movements. As a a matter of fact our trout blo- logists have only within the past few years seriously taken up the study of trout. For some reason or other sea trout are particularly choosey this season. Anglers have watched, with a throbbing heart and tense muscles. chunky silver sided beau- ties in the 4 pound bracket and over follow their Streamer or other lure. making tentative pass- es at it as they came, almost to their feet and then with a sweep of a powerful tail disappear with the speed of an arrow in the murky depths. Sometimesa heavy swirl will indicate a trout has taken I look-see and let it go at that. Iieavy runs are on the move in the general Murray Harbour and Cardigan districts. An angler friend of mine told me last week he tried his luck in the Seal River area (Kings County). He had hooked and landed a brace in the three quarter pound bracket when suddenly there were trout all ar- ound him... a dense school of big fellows had moved in after the shrimp. He was standing thigh deep in water at the time and he said it was I sight to behold. Shrimp were leaping from the wa- ter in all directions with the dor- sal fins of big trout cutting the water like a bunch of sharks. One four or five poundsr darted be- tween his legs and threw him mo- mentarily off balance. They were not interested in anything he had to offer and the initial pair he crcelcd was all he took home. Another fisherman reported he was trying for sea trout in .the Morrisons Beach area when he heard a terrific splashing behind him... a monster trout had ground- ed in a swift rush alter shrimp. He could only guess at its weight for it managed to loop and roll to safety in deep water before the angler reached the spot. He Tig- ured it would top a set of scales at nothing under six pounds for in Its wild rush seaward it'stirred up a murky trail of silt and mud like as if a scow had passed that way. One thing is sure... that part- icular trout will steer clear of the shallows for some time. Trout can be tantalizing at times but some excellent catches have been made nevertheless. Fisher- men tell me there are a lot of trout at Milton but one has to play his cards pretty carefully to con- nect. The Milton trout always possessed a high I.Q. .. it's a heavily fished stream. The boys who have landed I few report they have been up for some time and are not fresh run. An old timer who tried the Big Brook last week told me he never saw so many big trout in a certain pool in-his life. They were fresh ru fish and were rolling around the pool like mad. He watched front HARD BLOW TO STOMACI-I Light-heavyweight champion Ar- chie Moorc tags James J. Parker of Toronto with I hard right to the stomach during their heavyweight bout in Toronto. The San Diego, Calif., fighter was awarded a servers Say and lie on the surface for a full second, or longer, before submer- ging. They wouidnit look at any- thing whether it was an ordinary fly. buck-tail, streamer. spinner or Just plain worms. Various estimates at the num- ber of trout taken from the North River Causeway during the run early this spring have been given. As many as 00 anglers were there at one time but not all were catch- Ing trout. Between 800 and 1,000 during a three week period I would say is the nearest to being correct. This was given by an angler who fished it pretty consistently during the period mentioned. The trout acted differently at Vernon Bridge Causeway. There is a sandy flat above this Causeway covered by two or three feet of wntcr at av- erage watcr level. They'd take bait (worms) on this stretch like crazy for a full week. An obser- ver told me he watched 70 anglers lined up one day and practically all were catching trout in the one pound and better class. lie estim- attd a thousand trout were lifted from this Causeway on that day as quite a percentage of the crowd got their limit of 20. Some people can never stop when the trout are biting in good style. I have been told that two anglers from the City discovered the fresh run in the evening and made a killing all by themselves. Apparently they were the first to discovcr the silvery lode. They returned early the next morning and stayed all day. They had the field to themselves for a short time before a crowd began to gather. I have it on the best of authority that on five or six occas- ions this particular pair stopped gravel trucks headed toward town and emptied their crccls therein and that at least one truck driver dropped off gruh and soft drinks for them on his return trip No one could say just how many trout were in the crccls at the time they were cmntied but thcv were rounded out full and the pair were catching trout consistently all day. It appears to be an im- possibility for some people to play the game where our trout are con- cerned. It could be that someone will come forward with the infor- mation that will tcach a few of them a lesson that will really sink Accepts Weird - Swim Challenge SPORT ACCEPTS WEIRD ROCHESTER. N,Y. (AP)--Wes-1 Icy R. Struble Jr., who last Satur- day swam across Lake Erie while wearing police handcuffs. Friday accepted a challengdi to swim across the Niagara River in a strait-Jacket. Struble. a 30-year-old salvage- man from Newak. N.Y. said he is "more than happy" to accept the challenge of police captain Clif- ford Stinebring to swim the river. The Niagara Falls. N.Y., police- man is 50 years old. Struble said the strait - jacket swim will have to wait until he recovern from a lacerated thumb suffered when he fell at a swim- minrpool at the University of over :0 inches in length loop war Rochester Writers Soy Moore-Parker Bout More Force Than Fight NEWYORK (CP) - The con- EODIIII bcoldscottinhkiltandcouidnotbe and hell ringer. that Inore couldn't I. ninth "Din DIIIIII of the l'orld-Tple- the first ciang of the belt. which must have been wrapped in an heard by anyone except the hired have stand and the Saskatoon Gornnlc whenever he decided to m and sun. who did not attend ted e. ninth-round technical knockout af- ter he opened a cut over Parker's left eye. " . (CF Photo) Phillies. Tribe. Dodgers. Reds. Giants Win PHILADELPHIA (APT-PIICIIOF the sixth broke a 2-2 tie and Saul Rogovln's two-run single in snapped league-leading Milwaukee Braves' five-game winning streak as Philadelphia Phlllies bcat Braves 5-2 at Connie Mack Sta- dium Friday night. CLEVELAND tAPiAlIome runs by Rocky Colavito and Jim He- gan in the sixth inning powered Cleveland Indians to a 3-2 victory over Baltimore Orioles Friday night and extended the Trihe's winning string to seven games. BROOKLYN (AP)-Gil Hodges raced home with the winning run in the 10th inning Friday night- whtle Chicago Cubs were pre-oc- cupicd trying to turn a hunt into a double - play-to give Brooklyn I)odgcrs a 4-3 victory and stretch their winning streak to six gamcs. PITTSBURGH (AP) Wally Post slammed a ninth - inning triplc to drive in a run and pace Cincinnati Itcrllcgs to a 3-2 vic- tory over Pittsburgh Piratcs be- fore a crowd of 31,494 Friday night. NEW YORK VAPTCA two-run trible by ex-Cardinal Bill Srmii in the seventh inning Friday night gave New York Giants a 6-5 Vic- tory ovcr St, Louis. ending on eight-game Cardinal losing streak. lntennediaieshid Junior Abbies Play Tomorrow In a limbcring up exercise for the Island baseball playoffs the Intermediate Abbies and the Jun- ior Abbics will go at each othcr in an exhibition game on Sunday afternoon at Memorial Field. This will he the first time the- two clubs have faced each other this year and will he the first out- ing of the season for the Juniors as a club. a Game time Sunday is 2.30, l Don MacLean will likely do the, hurling for the intermediates and the junior starter will be Vern I-landraimn. Fans are reminded that tickets bought for thc Phlladctnhia Char- lottetown game that failed to ma- terialize on Thursday can he turned in at the box office Sunday for a refund or they may he held and used for a SpringliillLClmr- Iottelown game tentatively sched- uled for Sunday, August 5th. I MAN OF THE YEAR - Miczrrr i wxr,-Iour aewenr OFA CVIVCINIVA 77- 797; Vazwa C. BALTIMORE tAPi..Gerry Kea- aeiring. young golfing whiz ,fron1 Kitchener. ont., held on to a share of second place Friday at the half- way mark in the 72-hole Eastern Open championship. The 27-yearold Canadian. win- ner of this year's Ontario Open. made a comeback on the second nine to place three strokes behind leader Arnold Palmer, 26, of La- trobe, Pa. Kcsselrlng shot a one-under-par '71 for a 36-hole total of 139, fivc below par. He is tied in second spot with Babe Lichardus of Hill- side, N.J. A 68 in Thursday's opening round had left Kcsselring alone in With two days of shooting com- pleted Cpl. WM. Beatty, R.C.M.P. Chatham, N.B. is top man at the Provincial Rifle meet. leading the field with a total score yesterday of 202 points out of 225. He now has a combined total for the two days of 394. His performances on the second day were a first in the MacDonald Tobacco match. sec- ond in the City of Charlottetown, first in the second days aggre- gate and in the shoot-off with Sgt P.J. Landrigan to decide the win- ner of the first days aggregate he again came out on top. In the Ma('D0n8lfl he won the match with a score of 104 out of a pos- sible I05 and in the City match he was again in a shoot-off this time Licut. Mary MacLennan, Alex- andra, in which he was beaten by the sharp-eyed school teacher. The third match of the day also required a shoot-off to determine the winner, with Mir. A.F. Gorm- Icy. Lt. Mary MncLennan and Capt. Latta. Aldershot. N.S., tying with scores of 49. In the tie breaker Mjr. Gormley fired a possible to win the Rogers Hard- wnrg nrizc. Today the day will start with the Physical Fitness match at 300 yards. which with the com- bincd totals of the first two days will complete the Grand Aggre- gate. This will be followed by the main match of the meet the Jones Memorial, fired at 200, 300 and 600 yards, with ten shots at each of the first two ranges and fifteen at the third. The total of this match added to the Grand Aggre- gate will complete the Ottawa Aggregate from which will be selected the twenty-three addit- ional mcmbers to represent the Province at the Dominion Meet in Ottawa in August. The twenty- fourth member is Tpr.W.E. Har- dv. York. who is returning with the Canadian team from Bislcy. Following are tllp results of the matches fired yesterday: CITY OF CHARLOTTETOWN MATCH 10 rounds at 300 yards Lt. Mary MacLennan Cpl. W. M. Beatiy Tpr. R. Barwlse Sgt. G. A. Colcs Lt. G. J. Rogers .. Sgt. J. D. O'Connell- Sgt. Eric Coles Lt. P. T. Hooper . . . . . . .. Lt. L. V. A. MacDonald .. Mrs. Irene Hardy . . . . . . .. 0XCdt. R. B. liambly Sgt. G. G. MacLcnnan Capt. E. S. Latin I lKesseiri,ng Tied For 2nd Place gecond place behind. John Knight of Sllfllllfield. !ll., who had 67. Knight's 73 left him tied in third with Dow Finatewald of Bedford uetghts; Ohio, and Ernie Vossler of Fort Worth. Texas. Keguh-in; was one over par on the first nine and had to stage n second-nine comeback. He bird- ied tn, 10th and parred the re- rpalning hotel to the uni: where ther birdie kept him one un- der the course's par 72. Palmer jumped into the tourna '70 gave him an eight-under-par 136 for 72 holes. Cpl. W.M. Beatty. Leads Prov. Rifle Shoot With Score Of 394 Capt. E. 8. Latin . . . . . . 102 Lt. L. V. A. MacDonald . 101 Major A. F. Gormley .. . 101 Sgt. G. A. Cole: . . . . . .. 100 Sgt. Eric Cotes . 100 Li. G. J. Rogers Lt. P. T. Hooper .. Mrs. Irene Hardy . Gnr. C. C. Strong .. Lt. A. K. Mutch 0ICdt. R. B. Hambly Tpr. R. A. Vessey Sgt. P. J. Landrigan TYROS Tpr. D. 0. Clarke . . . . . . . . .. 95 Cat. W. J. R. Macdonald 95 Tpr. W. H. MacLean 94 Cpl. Pat Landrigan . . . . . . . . .. 91 THE ROGERS IIARDWARE C0. MATCH I0 rounds at 600 yards Cpl. W. M. Beatty . Sgt. Eric Cotes Sgt. J. D. O'Connell Lt. G. J. Rogers Tpr. R. A. Vessey Gnr. C. C. Strong Tpr. Myron Ling .. Li. A. K. Mutch Tpr. Fred Hooper . Lt. P. T. Hooper Mrs. Irene Hardy 0ICdt. R. B. Hambly . Sgt. G. A. Coles . . . . . .. Lt. R. E. Jenkins TYROS Cdt. K. B. MacDonald . . . . . . . .. Cdt. Merrill Smith Tpr. D. 0. Clarke Lt. L. V. A. MacDonald I6-Year Old Attempts La ke NIAGARA BN-THE-LAKE. Ont. (CPT-Doreen George,l6-year-old Toronto swimmer, plunged into Lake Ontario here Friday de- termined to become 'the second girl to onqucr the 32-mile stretch of water between here and the Toronto waterfront. Marilyn Bell made the crossing AA-h uh 3...-.....sas.as::::::: .n.n.na. mums. ment lead by steaming around the sweltering Mount Pleasant course- In six-under-par 66. His opening Tpn H. T. Vesey mu Refcrce Billy Burke steps in to San Diego. Calif. negro opened 53:. G, G, MacLenn;n , , 100. stop light between light-heavy. a cut over the Toronto boxcr 5 left Sgt. J. D. O'Connell . 9!ll weight champion Archie Moore g:&sH?g:'sl:3gl;:f :33: ';'llml)i;e'l'j: Lt. M M Le . 99 - . ' I sgt RS713: Cgltgs SP5” ' and James J. Parker in Toronto mdden by the referea Capt. J' C0195 99; during the ninth round after the (('p photo; rAmceitMiN TROUBLE giliPromoter May Lose Money g3;;But "Proud Of Whole Show" 9t) l By JACK SULLIVAN I Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO (CP)-It was just as- though Damon Runyon”s charact-l ers had come to life on King l Street. A policeman. fondling a loaded,- rvevolvcr, sat at a desk in a small, ofice in full vlcw of the passing- sidswalk crowd in downtown Tor- onto. Fighters and Major A F' Gormley ' ' ' I T ' ” ml trainers and the usual 105' s13'000 Sponsoring the Outdoor LL Mary Macmmnan ” ' 49c hangers-on sauntered in and out U-L ll - .. . Capt, E, s, Lam, , 4;” of the build-hm Ill tell you. he said, I dont Cst. W. J. R. MacDonald 4iil . ' care about the money but Im 1-pr, R, Ba;-wise , , , , , , , , , , , , ,. on Two men from the income tax proud of the whole show. I'm . 43 department sat around. They were proud because 1 there to check the books after Wednesday night's Archie Moore- Jamcs J. Parker "battle" at Maple Leaf Stadium. The cop was there "just in case" someone had notions about holding up the place. A lot of money was in the office-receipts from the fight that saw Archie, the California cutie from San Diego. giyc Toronto's Parker a fearful beating in a bout called at 2:02 of the ninth round of their scheduled 15-rounder. A man carrying a suitcase en- tered the street-lcvel office. head- ttuarters for the fight. The final I'I)Zlll'-'.'S-8li('n(I3IIC8, gate receipts- lions' Action Against Dubliniski is Dismissed TORONTO fCPi D;-(mu! Llons' court action to get quarter- back Tom Dublinski back from: Toronto Argonauts was dismissed Thursday by Chief Justice J. C. McRuer of the Supreme Court of. Ontario. The National Football Leagucl Lions sued their former ace quart- l onto. thc man who underwrote thcl in September, 1954. when she was 17 Sgt. P. J. Landrigan .. Doreen. a 110-pound Lakeshore Capt" Ji Cm” Swimming Club member. entered Lt. R. E. Jenkins . . . . .. .46 TYROS Csi. W. J. R. Macdonald 45 Cpl, Pat Landrigan Tpr. Myron Ling cm. Merrill Smith Tpr. 3um-”””3y”3if; .- TVAIOVII Tm 753 Major A. F. Gormlcy Tpr. H. A. Vcsscy . COP. S. G. Bowles . Set. A. M. Johnston Tpr. Fred Hooper .. Cdt. K. B. MacDonald . Tpr. W. H. MacLean .. THE MACDONALD TOBACCO C0. MATCH 7 rounds at 200, 500, and 600 yds. Cpl. W. M. Bcatty . . . . . . . . .. 104 Lt. R. E. Jenkins .. 103 Sgt. A, M. Johnston . .. 102 R. Barwisc . . . . . . . . . .. 102 - - ByAionMovor .47."! the water at 3:47 p.m. EDT. and started off at so strokes a min- e. iriit.V in a Canadian court of the erback for 310.000 and sought an injunction to prevent him from playing with the Big Four team. Lions attempted to prove the val- option clause in NFL contracts. STAIRS IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE APPOINTMENT OF BATT & MucRAE LIMITED AS ONAN ON PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND of a city ONAN E --mum ngon lvtv It at lunch I (OW!!!- hurl." ,4 .4 LS PIIOONOIIIO In OUOI0t." DEALERS home with our IECTRIC PLANT” "Hp olollrlc up-nave: would nubho tuuonvvnn" npn preuun run for unit aoscr. uoo wan. ONAN ELECTRIC PLANTS ARE DIST RIIIIT ED IN THE MARITIMESIY ''I much more done in s time hr luring olecnicitydothe work. our Ono Electric Plant openm 0 milk- ml machine. cream tonallthelighn InIu,drulls and other power woln. gum cleaner and I .Vhy don”: It-fr your fun ,L- .. ml" watering syl- you elec- P and fighters' purses - uoulii be ready soon, the promolch said. MAY NOT LOSE Outside, in: a n i n g against a; parked car. Dave Rush of Tor-1 extravaganza. enthused: ”lt's got-I ting better cvcry minute. You know, I don't think I'll lose a cent on the production." Earlier in the day Rush said he proved to the people of Toronto that this is I big-league sports town-one of the best in the world." Inside. the books u;ere exam- ined, the income-tax men left and the figures were ready to be an- nounced. Sat, July 28 1956 The Guardian, Page 7 Former Musicia n Britain's Chief Olympic Medal Hope By KEN METHERAL Canadian Preu Staff Writer LONDON (CP)-Eighteen years ago Canadian music critics hailed William B a r c l a y Livingstone Palmer as a child prodigy. Today the Toronto-born son of an English clergyman is Britain's chief hope for an Olympic shot put medal in Australia next No- vember. In the intervening years this remarkable young man of 24 has taken a theology degree at Ox- ford Universiiy. developed into a pianist of concert calibre, won recognition as a star at rugger, cricket, rowing, tennis and sprint- ing, and twice recovered from crippling physical ailments. OLYMPIC (IERTAINTY The splendidly-proportioned 248- pound athlete is rated a certainty for Eritain's Olympic team al- though he first started heaving the 16-pound shot in earnest less than iii months ago. "I had played around with wleigbt-throwing events -- I . Javelin, shot put and hamme -in the army and at Oxford,” says Palmer. 'tThcn a little over a year ago Britain's best shot putter, John Savidge, announced his retire- ment. I interpreted that as a per- sonal challenge to myself to make the Olympid team." At the time Palmer was recov- ering from a serious stomach ail- ment that caused friends to ad- vise him to drop all strenuous sports. Instead the six-foot. six- inch athlete heaved the shot 46 feet to make a British team se- lected to compete against Ger- many, In this, his first interna- tional competition, he tossed the lead sphere 51 feet. In the recent Amateur Ath- letic Association championships, he achieved 54 feet, two inches. "Born in Toronto, March 1932, weak and useless,” says Palmer, who rattles off facts and figures with the same cannon-ball force he uses to propel the shot into a compost heap in his father's'gar- den at Bromley, Kent, a suburban market town it miles southeast of London's Victoria Station. IN TORONTO PARISH At the time his father. Rev. Noel Palmer, was Vicar of St. Anne”s Anglican Church. Toronto. Barclay started violin lessons at the age of five and a year later won high praise for his perform- ance at a recital sponsored by the Toronto Conservatory of Music. SUPEROYL I0-30 IS TODAY'S BIGGEST HEAVY DUTY "The family moved to Englrnn when I was seven. I was che:..y, probably bronchial, and had t ode- cide between the violin and games. I picked games.” Four years later be contracted an abscess in the bones of hi: right ankle and doctor: said he might be crippled for life. But after 14 month.-: in bed tin Ib- acesstcleared-”it was a Inirnciq a real miraclelnand the frail youngster began dcveloplng phyb ically and athletically. Palmer's a m b i tio n a? They sprout in all directions, athletically and theologically. He hopes ta have a church of his own soon. But at the moment his chief am bition is to surpass the 57-foot. 69':-inch European shot put record held by Jirl Skobla of Czechoslo- vakia. "But I'll have to be reaching 60 feet or better to make much of a showing at Melbourne. Amen ica's Parry O'Brien had a fabu- lous 61 feet. four inches a few weeks ago.” lohnny Saxton To Defend Title NEW YORK (AP)-Johnny Sax- ton of Philadelphia Thursday agreed to defend his world welter- weight boxing title against Car- men Basilio, former champion, in Syracuse's War Memorial and auditorium sometime in Septem- her. The agreement was reachediin the offices of the International Boxing Club here although Nor- man Rothschild of Syracuse, will be co-promoter. Because Bllnky Palertno. Saxton's managor.tI not licensed in New York, Saxton acted for himself. Rothschild said the bout would be televised nationally. Saxton won the title from Basilio in Chicago last March 14. Roths- child said Saxton will get 40.per cent of the gate receipts and Ba- silio 20 per cent. Remember When By THE CANADIAN PRESS Two-ton Tony Gniento shocked tl'e boxing world by dropping Joe Louis onto the seat of his pant! with a tuundhouse swing in the third round of their heavyweight battle at Yankee Stadium 21 years ago today. I MOTOR OH. I BARGAIN IN EXTRA ENGINE PROTECTION IIFORE YOU G0-Make thin change for tho honor! fill up your crank- au vllh IUPIIROYL I0-OI Pun Poluuylvlnln Heavy Duty OII. Horn h tho world's flout lumnor-Winter Motor Oil that given Ila atoning one and npiit-oocond lubrlentlm of I0-W all III the full-Dolled Iufinq protoetlon of IAZ III for cununuotu high-Ipood, hot-vonthar drlvinl. IUPZROYL iii-SI will any in your crnnkuu longer than any other heavy duty oil. DO-f'f'-YOU'Ill1.l'e-Change your own all In I few only -inutn-and you are Illll youivo got the but that IIOII1 Hal M11- IAVI IAHZLYI ioowo run: PENNSYLVANIA ounr GALLON .49 L89 Moto-Master V.I. 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