ipvroblem of ITY'l‘D1'0i,'[ng ii I . humins by artificial I1l€l;1i,l()EI:s:II)!(‘}EI:‘ELa, xledod-18-, 3 °°§I 1" “head? wines mm. more Colnplmated ,2-Qds aoiictt, hue tlo $200,000 inaik DC"'C’30Pin.;' i'estrictioiis effecting l(.::€l‘Cl'lllCYI‘l)C)lIli,Sill1£II He Clltoiliagfcotgte huntcr acces Ollpfiv te . .1 1,1’ . '. furtlier negatt: the Valile c1))fHsl)§r:k)-I 3 L:\IAI:1l'(§(ll:I§I}0llI'o(Il\I- ing. If the opportunit of h t- i « V ‘ I - mg of released birdsyis Cuigxfizd iig pheasant liuntinsz. or Dheasant Belleville Fans Are Celebrating BELLEVILLE, Ont. (CF) - Hometown fans streamed into wntown Belleville Friday as ‘ll’ trot in 208 3'3. on Api-illmile tracks. where it wouldn't The former was driven by Dave; 22 lie’ won at $3.000 (ml in g be surprising if he took a recordlconstable and the latter by 2.07 3-.2. And on April 29. he woiijof 2.00, and we hope he will. -"James (Roach) MacGregor, the a $3,000 trot in 2.09 4/5. The track at Rockinghamlowiier. To FASTEST CLASS ,iiiust be getting much faster,l One of the happiest young men This was pretty strenuous work as we notice where Rapid Goosein this province is Stewart Mac- Aubrey Keizer writes in liisfof trotters and pacers to some- SP0I‘lSCycle in the Cape Bretonitliiiig like 110. Post. that the racing at Sydneyl w. P. Edwards of Frederic- Sports Center this year is sureggim, N_ B,’ has V91-y kindly sent to be most interesting. and tllelus an officiai pi-ogi-am fi-om first races will be held ' The Guardian Paéc 9 Saturday, May 3. 1953 . .. . . late!‘ Roosevelt Raceway for the nightl . . I . abundance” what does a more for a horse that had been laidlliillii §VCl3O1‘t(:ll::ae‘ PIml1tiPtnm.twhodhas takelf this month. lof Apr“ 26' The attendatlce wasl we clean ille Metariands w<?n the by the posting of private property handful of private citizens in this "9 f‘'°”‘ the "”V‘°"5 fa“ and 21750 foi'lRa id Goose d 3 th Spema' “ms an we 0 BOOM ’36’126 “d the "a”"“““’°l‘ an Cup hgckey championship little is to be gained by stocking province hope to accomplish on had never been asked to stop; . D an 5.-v e one-time great race mare. .C. Kelowna. gonfires were lit in the main is and fans staged an im- mmptu celebration. I.-ii-e reels were called out to I areas where most of the good a pheasant habitat is on alienated land. It has therefore been decided fast prior to his sale. Earl was 900 for Canny Scott‘ , , _ , intending to go aiong with his‘ The first suspension that \ve:T9t11'edf}‘01?1 Campaigning in 1955 training, as usual, having iniliave noted this season in thebafler Wmmng m0I‘e than $2-000 mind starting to race in the lat-‘ East Was handed out to D319 in her previous year's racing. Interest in harness racing has “tal-Ke" was $2,230,364. Belle Act-I WOOLEN3 boomed in the New Waterford 011. dI‘iVeI1 by Billy Hal1gh’E0n.' ‘I Dial 7366 area recently, and some 40 trot- won the fifth race in 2.01 3/5 for ' dole allowance’ with a few hundred pheasants per year, SOIPG People never le~arn....not while they are playing with capi- Bessie Budlong, 2.12 3/5. that ready to move into the Sports fastest mile over a half-mile _ ters and pacers from there are a l9UI"S€ Of $7.500 This is “lei New Method Cleaners ter part of May or early in June, Eastman Of Tulares Ca1if0l‘Il‘ié.l She had been mated t° Lucky so what;,1night be expected hap- and it will be for the balance ofichief. 2-0_4 1/5. I‘-ecord taken over pened_ It may’ be because he the meeting at Rockingham Parkta, h31f'm11€ lfack. that also 1'6- was shifted to the fastest class which closes on May 17- ‘(Wed f1‘°m Competition at the that the ‘British Columbia Game Commission, will not purchase farm-raised pheasants for release after 1957.” unquote_ tal other than their own at least. Another ‘item: the phéasants released in the province this spring cost $4.50 per bird. The wise the flames but the crowd started the fires agan as soon as they were put out. However, Center, swelling the populationltrack this season. . . . ii iii ' - t R ii, The incident for which thel°10_5e.0f1954- DU1'iY1‘g_hlS Cam- there were "0 .Se“°us m°1den.ts', One sentence of the above is BC’ pheasants °°st $2'25P°1'bI1'd Svheree Il'lr:glEITlIneta Katigoselégy Suspension W35 i11Cl11‘I'ed hap-lpalgmngt he “'0” 344-750 He is K N O W C A N A D A B E T T E R E The Celebiatlons °f.B.euevme5 worthy of a reprint‘ "Nor is this Another phase of the pheasant 159 1/5 Winner then of Covet: I t5 victory in the deciding game ‘ ' ’ pened in the sixth race, Satur- day. April 26, when Eastman fin- ished second with Pointer’s First, a 4-5 favorite in a race, which in the opinion of the stew-‘ ards, the horse was "very evi- dentily able to win". now owned by Frank MacKay, East Royalty. Bessie Budlong is owned by Alexander Beaton, North River, who is also a great horse lover. The foal which is so well bred is doing nicely due Drogram‘ will be commented upon next week. Back Stretch (Continued from page 8) improved by recovery of birds in subsequent years as apparently few survive after the first year.” I have met and talked with mem- bers of the B.C. Game Commis- sion regarding their pheasant re- 7f the best-of-seven series against Kelowlla Packrs for the Can-a- dian senior a-mateur hockey title lasted nearly two hours. $178,000; Lord Stewart, 3, 2.02, then the winner of $275,000; and Torch Key, 2.02 4/5, winner of over $51,000. The 'result was that Dean Gallon developed lameness and had to be retired. Thus the Probable Pitchers NEW YORK (AP) — Probable pitchers for today's major league baseball games (won-lost records in parentheses): Nationa lLeague Cincinnati at St. Louis—HaddIx (1-1) vs. Mizell (0-2). Milwaukee at Chicago — Rush (1-1) vs. Phillips (0-0). Pittsburgh at Los Angeles - Frieiid (3-0) vs. Kipp (1-0). Philadelphia at San Francisco - Simmons (1-2) vs. Monzaiit (2-2). American League Chicago at Washiiigton—Dono- van (0-3) vs. Griggs (0-0). Clevel-and at Baltimore -— Mc- Llsh (0-0) vs. O’Dell (1-2). Kansas City at New Yonk——Ur- ban ( 1-0) vs. Larsen (2-0). Detroit at Bos'ton—Shaw (0-1) ‘ vs. Nixon (0-3). ' Hunters’ Corner ' (Continued from page 8) able controversy regarding the "value of annual introductions of farm-raised birds. In recent years game management orgianizaitons ' everywhere have been giving cri- tical appraisals of the practice. The results of many studies ; suggest very strongly that artifi- ‘ cial stockings are costly, unecon- omical, and contribute relatively little. toward improving pheasant - abundance or pheasant hunting. This impression has certainly , characterized the results of 6 con- ‘ secutive years of handing studies maintained‘ by the Game Com- mission. In the six years from 1949 to 1954 the B.C. Government pur- chased 95.902 pheasants at a cost of Sil91.915.25. It recovered $69,- ‘ 769.70 from the sale of pheasant tags. The loss was $122,147.25. Never more than 30 per cent of the cock birds released in any i one year were ever recovered yet i compared with the recovery in i some other areas of the United I States and Canada this was good _ but, it brought the value of a re- (leased cock pheasant from $2.25 _ at stocking $7.53 when harvested. Nor is this improved by recovery of birds in subsequent years as apparently few survive after the first year. With the current difficulties of producing a good-quality bird and itlie increasing difficulties impos- ;ed by gradual urbanization of suitable ‘pheasant range, the YOUR ) t l | SAFETY BUILT GARDEN TOOLS IN stocking program while attending Wildlife Conference in Ottawa and Montreal. They went after it big releasing as many as fifteen thousand in a single planting. The great bulk of re-stocked pheasants were cocks as they only were le- gail game. One member in particular in- terested me greatly as he had a lot to do with the pheasant pro- gram. One experiment they tried set everyone thinking. In 1951 or 52 five thousand fully matured cock pheasants were released in the Chiliwack Valley a month be- fore the pheasant season opened. A section of the Valley approx- imately 10 miles long was select- ed for the experiment. It was al- ready populated with wild pheas- ants acessable to hunters from Vancouver but the main attrac- tion was that it was a natural for setting up road blocks for game bag checks. Thousands of pheas- ant tags were sold and literally thousands of hunters flocked to the spot on opening morning. For days a game back ,check was kept and the birds tabulated as to whether they were re-stock- ed or wild pheasants. The year of release was stamped on the bands The game officers and Commiss- ion officials were due for a shock. True 30 per cent of the banded cocks were acounted for, or 1500 of the released pheasants, were bag-ged. But. . . .for every five re- stocked plieasa-n-tis found in hun- ters game bags there were 95 wild pheasants. Another shock only five of the remaining three thousand five hundred released birds were found in hunters game bags in the next two years. That means that 3,495 pheasants vanished into thin air from this 5,000 «release. There was just one conclusion to reach. . . .tlie ‘ vast majority of the planting failed to survive the first few weeks. This experiment really: set the Game Commission thinking and think- ing hard. The overall returns from releas- ed pheasants over the six period averaged 20' per cent. The Chili- wack Valley planting was a re- cord. In comparison with some States _to the south of us this plantings, particularly along the eastern seaboard, fall below the 5 per cent mark. Provinces in middle and eastern Canada have also fallen close to zero. The point I wish to bring home is: When the Government of British Columbia releases 15,983 pheasants. . . .al- most 16,000 per year over a six average is very high. Sometimes ’ the fall of 1953 that Earl return- ed_ from Roosevelt Raceway, bmnglng back a young trotited named Dean Gallon. He had been sold, with others. in a dispersal sale there, and Earl, who had taken a fancy to him, was the high bidder and brought him back with him. _ His career in 1954 was except- ional. as in ten starts he won all of them, and many will recall the free-for-all trot during Old Home Week on August 14, which Dean Gallon won in three straight heats. Nell Kalmuck 2-2- 2, Cobblestone 3-4-6, Mary Merk 4-3-7, and four others starters. Time 2.12, 2.09 4/5 and 2.10 2/5. AGAINST TIME After the races he was given a short letup, and then was sent against the “watch” and to the surprise of those who were pre- sent he trotted in 2.04 3/5 at the Charlottetown track. Two very reliable horsemen caught the mile and there is no doubt that it was a genuine penformance. Earl then shipped him to the state of Maine and won all his races there. The news of his extraordinary mile at .Charlotte- town filtered through the Mari- times. and R. J. Logue of Syd- ney wrote to Sanders Russell in Alabama to come up and look him over for soundness. Dean Gallon was harnessed and hooked up, and Russell sat behind him as Earl brushed him over the roads around Kensing- ton. Russell advised Logu_e to buy him, and he met Earl’s price of $20,000. He was taken away by Sanders Russell and given a short pre- paration at his track in Alabama and then moved on with other members of the stable to Roose- velt Raceway, which opened in early April. On April 11, he won CUSTOM POTATO PLANTING . $6.00 AN ACRE . MELVILLE BELL Desable, " ‘ P. 1:. 1.’ ARGAIN BllY! 2H. P. FULL 8”*CllT ' Extrci-power 2 l1.p. Clinton ‘quick-start engine ' Hcinclleslike Cl breeze to carpet-cut your lawn quickly ° El,iminates ' trimming Trims Within I-4" of trees, sidewalks, etc. career of what promised to be one of the sensational trotters of all time was brought to a close We may mention that his sire was Bill Gallon, took a trotting record of 1591/2 and is the sire of three trotters with records better than 2.00 and the sire of 15 ti-otters with records of 2.05 or better, and sire of 11 pacers with records of 2.05 or better. His dam is the famous brood mare, Lois Hanover, by Dean Hanover, 1.591/2. She is the dam of trotters with records better than 2.05. We mention that the well known young caretaker Ralph with his stable this year. EXPECTED TOO »MUCH Len O’Meara, whose stable is racing at Rockingham Park, New Hampshire, hasn’t had much success with Section Man 3, 2.03 3/5. Probably Len and the owner haven’t expected to do too much there, the reason being that Section Man is a very big horse that takes tremendous strides, and he wasn't expectedi to be a great threat in the ‘fast classes on a half-mile oval. The racing he is getting now will put him in shape, and from Rock- Shepherd will be assisting Earl , GOOD FIELDS ging over the track every week day. ing Over 100 trotters and pacers are being given training or jog- Charlottetown They range in age from two years to 14 years, and in our opinion is the largest, horse population that we can recall at this time of year, and it means that the rac- programs which start on June 7 and run to September 28, will have good fields and give good enjoyment to the race fans. Up to Friday, the track re- cord for the season was 2.18 3/5, held jointly by Raven Abbe, 3, 2.07, and Minneapolis, 2.10 3/5. to Stewart Ma_cRae's interest. Sickness - Accident Hospital - Medical Surgical Insurance Write or Rhone LAURIE B. 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