9! e 4 , ‘Historians have recorded that|holds a key position in the Queens le blackest dey Scotland ever|/County Fish and Game Associa- had its inception on Cullo- tion. I apoke to him: “Dida’t fen Moor when King James|" ~ ot ag md practicaliy all his nobility | you think its time you were mak- | vere slain in that memorable |ing a count?” “I was just think- ile. If wild geese keep any iS about that was hi it would seem as if their b2ck” I made the — eo them. | flackest day, so far as this pro- They had eleven. C fimce is concerned, occurred on | cautioned. “you have just four fionday, Octcher 25th, 1959. It, gp” Geese were moving in) fas a day of torren‘ial rain and|2" almost steady string. I had ale force winds. At daybreak |20u' 300 yards to walk to the n the morning it was pretty | Ts” to the south and I had to y awoke at 5.30 and lay |érop to the ground er ond times ed listening to the rain | reminded myself ombadier ; ing on roof and the wind | Wells the horizontal heavy weight jowling like a Banshee ee enc ate trip — hinking about how the Southport ‘d have developed farmers Refuge geese Would ‘6uses. come dawn. I felt it in my The four hunters in the next jones that they were in for a hide had 8 geese. I inquired who ough passage. ieee doing so Tneyer shooting ‘on ithe south si of Fuillertons ears on 1 eo oe aes 5 P : w ver they were a might as well be out battling were rigged out in Kenny Jen- ements as fighting with ,kins field. They were sure hav- BE le ntees e(aee ee ee o _ mi | proximat ” Ss from this tep into my armipt length yel-| point in less then an hour. On| ow oe sae - the pect ar gee trip I was only a few lonoured ing coat over some yards from the hunters with ‘ain aan clothing and sally ‘four to go when I spotted 7 geese was a wild morning. | coming. | i i | Packers resembled a lake. The pets on a strong . . . barely “ar running boards were under /moving against the gale. They | I made it through. I|hovered about four feet above defence,” admitted coach Eagle Rollie Miles, still ailing after be-| pig lead in the first game. water but lidn’t take my shotgun for my the decoys and appeared to hang ions were not to hunt geese in the wind. One was_in front, jut to check first how the goose four in a tight knot above the tunters would act when geese decoys, and two a few feet be- re caught fear down. T reached Bunbury Station a dropped in a heap amid the! lew minutes before 7 o'clock. As “decoys. The remaining three | jotted down the number of three Prompily alighted on the ground. tars and a truck parked near | One walked to where one of ed Station geese were mov- Companions was kicking on the | almost steady string | Stubble and gazed fizidley at it e’s Cove on the Hills- | With her head cocked sideways. and guns were pop- | The other two just stood and look- firecreackers from three ©d bewildered. For a matter of out in Bus Jones 40 acre five or six seconds, it really field. I never saw. wild- | S¢emed longer, the three hunters definitely off the beam *ept their guns trained on the ing so stupid. One party Seese on the ground. It was a/ were set out along ‘ense few seconds. | remember west line about 150. yards ‘hinking to myself: “If you boys the Station. Another crowd |fire another shot you'll go back in woods at the south |'® town picked as bare at the and a third on the fields Provervial Mother Hubbard's Cup-' board.” The spell was broken) with their landing hind. When the three zuns spoke | jin unison the four middle birds | i ¢ Z i Rag liz Ha ~= 3 aa5° | Siterprovincial Football Union |ended a week of honing a de- oe *- ar ek 2° ee ee a ee ee ee Lions Can Expect Nothing - VANCOUVER (CP) — The big- gest bogey man here this Hall- owe'en ig expected to be Jackie Packer. : No matter what position the versatile Parker plays for Ed- monton Eskimos in the Western umbf Lions can expect nothing but trouble. There are some statistics w back up that: : Lions defeated Edmonton once in the season, on Aug. 31 witn Parker in the spot Lidns like him best—on the bench with an in- semi-final Saturday, British Cot ' jured knee. TO BEARD LIONS Eskimos Hone | Defensive Razor EDMONTON (CP) — Edmon-! Robinson, a rookie head coach, ton Eskimos Thursday night | indicated that a tight defence will be an important factor im the series, He forecast only ‘“‘a real tough ball game*”” Keys wrote off Ed- monton’s 38-14 defeat of B.C. in their last meeting. “We had one of our better tensive razor -that became slightly rusty late in the West- ern Interprovincial Football Union season. It has been sharpened to help beard British Columbia Lions in} their Vancouver den Saturday in the opener of @ two-game total-| point semi-final series. playing well.” Edmonton would start Jackie of intensive drill and practice. {back “but we'll spot Don Getty.” “We've been concentrating on Kruger would take over for half Keys in an interview. ing tackled hard last week, im The Edmonton defensive team punt return chores. allowed only 116 points in its first | 2 k thew“ Deal May Bring The last four games saw Esks' » give up 105 points and lose iwoi Needed Pitcher games and a good chance at first place m the WIFU. The defence ; looked weary at times. To San Francisco Injuries to tackle Roger Nel-| yew yo Ap . ‘ } RK ‘AP)°— Theres 7. guard Mike Kmech, back | more than a 50-50 chance that Mike Lashuk and halfback Oscar the San Francisco Giants will Kruger weakened the defensive complete a major deal next the club’s vice - president ‘said Can. Golf Team rockie all-star team by a chewing stolen somewhere between here, ™0st productive in years. , just how stupid wildgeese get | when one dropped his gun and | ran out shouting: “We got our timit’? squad. All will be dressed for; month that will bring them an- Saturday s game. }other much - needed front line Keys, 35, like Lions’ Wayne ritcher, Charles (Chub) Feency, ‘Thursday. ‘ Feeney, here to attend a lunch- x eon tendered to the. major league Loses Equipment all-star gum firm, said he expected the JOHANNESBURG, South Africa | ‘"ree-week inter-league trading (Reuters) — Lost, strayed | period starting Nov. 21 to be the end London are the golf clubs or aa tele pee eee the Canadian team which arrived P Wednesday for faster I believe he could have .eaith golf to i caught one of the bewildered | next un. ee ret in a straight line into the muz- aver Hilliard Lyle last saw their i of one in SS ae to! clubs and golf shoes when they i south. dropped > ® boarded a pl it Lo ir- | second fell wounded in the field port. ce while the 3rd and last kept go-| Since they arrived here, the ing. I dont think it—lived long | Canadians have been practising for I heard guns to south start | with borrowed equipment. popping. pores Garry Cowan, runnerup HOw PID? anadian amat golf champion | this year, said: “I'll be glad to | This incident shows clearly | get my own shoes again.” Pause of combination of cures: Cub Coaches doo sree Scat jon ao tt TO'| |The situation there is almost oO nstruct “From the talks we've had with | clubs in the American League as the Common-| el! as in our own league,” Fee- | aey said, “I predict there will be lots of deals made, three or four survivors. They promptly flew; The six players and team mai of which will be of major status. ’ | Feeney declined to identify any lof the players involved, but he | acknowledged the Giants’ prime | a need was pitching. Jelley’s Dept. Store O'Leary, P. E. L = the same as at the Southport set-up, although not quite. The Southport Farmer allows no shooting within a quarter mile but in the case of McEwen's Island its used as a Private Shooting Preserve. Shooting takes | place about once a week and then its given a rest to allow CHICAGO ‘AP)—Freddie Fitz- simmons and Rogers Hornsby. dismissed as Chicago Cub coaches Thursday accepted positions as =— in the Cubs’ farm sys- em. invites you to take THE EMERSON oe ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee xX - In the next two meetings, won by Edmonton 29-7 and 38-14, Parker scored 42 points on six feld goals, three touchdowns and six: converts. B.C. had beaten Edmonton in Vancouver's Empire Stadium only once before Aug. was in Sept. 24, which Parker did not play. Needless ta say Parker is the league’s leading scorer. Meanwhile, Lions coach Wayne Robinson, who forecast that his team will go all the way to the Grey Cup this year after over coming Calgary 10-8 to enter the piayoffs, is being cautious in his utterances to his players. “We'll play them one game & a time,”’ he says. “I know_you hear ft a lot dur - come down to it, that’s the way it has to be done. I keep telling the players time and again to think about Edmonton and forget about Winnipeg.’ 1HEN EDMONTON The second game of the two- game,.*total point semi-final wiil pe played in Edmonton Wednes- games that day; they weren't) day wi'h the winner meeting Win- | inircg for the championship. Robinson says he figures both 1 dropped down and| Esks were to leave for Vancou-|Parker, the WIFU scoring cham-| , il “shoot the works” on The street in front of Canada watched. The 7 came in like pup-| ver by air today after five days pion for this season, at quarter-| the first ie “No matter where you are, you have to shoot the works for | “Actually I’m glad Edmonton | chose to play the first game in Vancouver. If we had the choice we would have called it the same way. If one team has to make two plane trips I would prefer they do it.” ca The weatherman was hesitant about forecasting as far ahead as Saturday. But he did say ‘there is a strong probability that the present above-average veather will continue this week and at least a 50-50 chance that it will still be here Saturday.” Which means it will probably be sunny and clear. FOR RENT floor sanders and edgers alse “FABULON” the famous “BOWLING ALLEY” finish for home floors. CHANDLER BROS. | 1 Plywood Place | Towing Service } Day Phone 9722 Night Phone 8048 - 8858 Member D. AA. MURPHY’S SERVICE STATION AUCTION CARDS @ Large or Small Orders @ Immediate Delivery From Cards in Stock ing the season, but when you | tas: A ee | } | | | } } ! j } “ the geese to quieten down there were dead geese lying|forget about what happened @ the Scheffing regime ts back in fl over the place. It struck | week previous. Once geese have|the baseball business. Scheffing forcibly they were,a set destination in mind they'll and former Cub coach George more concerned with throwing| absorb a lot of punishment to Myatv have been hired as coaches : and they were throwing |have their own way. Space :s by new manager Charlie Dressen Menty of it, and killing | running out and Kenny's Field | of Milwaukee Braves. Coach E!- than they were in tak-| will have to wait another week | vin Tappe is staying on to help The two were fired alonz with " manager Bob Scheffing the- day after the 1959 season ended. i and | Thus everybody concerned with bo TEST Hear ‘how thuch better music | can sound on Emerson Stereo Hi-Fi with “‘new found sound” Central Printery Ing count. I knew all three. One| at least. alt Alston Inks -Year Contract .LOS ANGELES ‘AP) — Man-| Soft-speaking, diamond - smart ger Walter Alston has signed a| Alston is second only to Casey new one-year contract to pilot the; Stengel in managerial longevity orid champion Los Angeles|m the major leagues. Stengel Dodgers and he gets a raise w went to New York Yankees in Day. 199 and Alston took over the General Manacer E. J. ‘Buz-| then Brooklyn Dodgers in 1954. tie) Bavasi announced the sign- | He is the only Dodger manage: ng Thursday after a talk with|to win three pennants, in 1955- ston at his home in Darrtown, | 46-59. Dhio. Alston is the only man to man As usual, the Dodgers did no age the club to victory in the divulge money but it is believed world series. He won from tir hat Alston's salary now ap-| Yankees in 1935 prior to this proaches $40,000 a year. |year’s triumph. ; “Alston has accepted terms for | one ysar contract—and he was: ; ce race.” Bava Banks Ink — a nice raise He n Ss n S MANAGER OF THE YEAR” Fo ‘60 Alston was voted ‘‘manager Pact r me year’ for leading\the Dodg-| cincaGo (AP)—Chicago Cubs I Nati : = to the National League pes Thursday signed their star short- ‘ant in a playoff with Milwaukee} ; : land then winning the world ser- S'0P>. Ernie Banks, for 1960. It was ‘guessed his salary was 5 in six games with Chicago! ck Wek upped $10.000 to a near club rec- hite Sox. The Dodgers finished ord $60,000. 3 dismal seventh in 1958. Reaks fepertedly teceived a $45.000 base salary with a $5.000 nn Captures bonus this year when he hit 45 y Young Awa rd jand set two major league fielding ‘ |home runs, drove across 143 runs records. The club salary record is the BOSTON ‘AP)—Early Wynn of}... Chicago White Sox Tearedig Wea $65.000 contract Ralph Kiner car- med the winner of ihe Cy|Tied to the Cubs from Pittsburgh ‘oung Memorial Award as the Pirates in 1953. Du nding pitcher in the major| son. Wynn, who received 13 of the! ° 6 votes cast by members of the In Big Race Baseball Writers Association of| $$.» merica for the trophy presented} NEWMARKET, England ‘AP Young’s memory by baseball; Americanowned Tooth and Nail, bommissioner Ford Frick, had ajthe favorite, floppéd Thursday 2-10 record for the year. His 22)the Dewhurst Stakes for two third-term Cub manager Charlie Grimm. i © Phone 8506 © Charlottetown, P. E. I. IMMEDIATE DE ON ‘TAGS. *No Delay! | ©No Waiting! 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