r . Grey Cup final Inge played on Sailings. Nave. uestion are .3“ W Q m. date u: c ADIAN runes " “’l'ifi down to e dollar- ' proposition. Reports I, 0‘ 1mm Wednesday said the W. mybeyanbedmrtofllan- ;, ‘ v. Stadium end 5 the East. at Toronto or .. became of the M311 by Vancouver offi- : ch, day was out, people . manta. Montreal. Winni- md Vancouver had some- g‘w "y. A meeting is sched- m Vancouver Thursday, at . m the air may be Wit at Varsity Stadium '- rental is I flat $20000. To- W911 581 .. *fl'rltRoNTO? , rt «my Varsity Stadium?” pres. or“ Ted Workman of Montreal “was asked. He said that of- '- . at McGill Stadium in Mon- "have agreed to a tentative rental flame which would be a great deal less than the amount Vancouver is talking about for than year and less. to some ex- tent. than Varsity ,Stadium changed last year.” A statement issued by Orvel cook, vice-president of the Pa“ cihc National Exhibition, which operates Empire Stadium. said a contract has not yet been signed but “top executives from the Grey Cup committee. the PNE and the Canadian Football League wall meet in Vancouver this week to iron out the misunderstanding-s which are obstructing final signed agreements." \ At Winnipeg. tootban commis- sioner G. Sydney Halter said he womd attend the Vancouver meet mg and hoped "a satisfactory agreement will be reached.” One Toronto report. denied by Vancouver officials. said that op- erators of the city-owned Empire Stadium had demanded a rental of $40,000. ‘ Cook said in. 1 statement that terms worked out a meeting in Toronto last May were unanim- iHUNTER's CORNER , o 'Obiection Hos Taken On Real Practical Form , 1 1mm where objection to the -" .t sion of the trout season to no. . doth has taken a prac- ‘ . form. A notice in the Guar- . announces that Reg Mac- ..,. has prohibited trout .- in the Big Brook and ‘ of September 16th. -.Mr. Mac- ‘1' is the owner of an ex-. , an. » trouting area in this sec- . , that ranks with the best that :7 ,, province has to Offer. I also loads! that Mr. MacDonald “better known as Reg Alec... Hepraofical knovdedge of trout to none in the province. :‘ mill pond owners e‘re ' along the same line but 3, the moment are pursuing a ‘, sudsee’ policy. For approximately 30 years I _ actively, engaged in the pro- .. of our fish and game and . 4.,» this period I have clitcked lit examined thousands trout " oudbatches caught between and September 15th. didn’t require years to " certain facts reg - ' .Itiomyfirmbelief gleaned .. a1 contact with trout . , are in the best condi- ’ Item May 1st to August 31st. n 20nd trout, according to my v. are at their best during ; June. Unless the mill , ghdeep and supplied with a of bottom springs mat». with natural food in . ,w'n the trout basin Ito Set A v. mun.ww~ue«gr II ‘0 .l ‘ lose a lot offlihe flavour um , tortuout mid 3mm E; heat. In some ponds they 1‘. marinany well. ‘ _ other " A erotItheirh; hostim . ugust'. 've exam- .'-'gels of sea trout taken in , ism streams during the mlhethadsetwiihel- 1" ,woodenfilmnessenhour . cradled. l have bal- gpoundtnmmtacnossoneof ,. Pineareaof’Klnngnmty ber ) my fingers that were stiff as pok- ers. After the first week of Sep- tember I noticed a distinct change in the texture of even salt water trout. Its perhaps hard to des- cribe but they had a flabby feel if not actually soft. By Septem- 15th one was liable to find anything. Here is a specific in- stance: I once checlsed the lift!» it of sea trout taken from the pool below the Ross Mill at Stur- geon on September 14th._ They were lovely looking specimens in the three quarter to pound brac- ket. . .but they were so soft one could poke one's fingers through them. I felt at the timethe ang~ ler might as well throw them away and 931% the tr 1e, and smell. of logging them home. I later learned they went to mush in the frying pan and smelled like anything else but a rose. The ash call was their final resting place. _ ‘ ‘ JUST CAT, F001) When n had on the. farm I caught the odd trout in Novem- Grdmg her as bait for my mini: traps. They Were slab sided. slimy creatures fit for nothing elsebut minikpr cat food. When I hear and read of biologists stating that a year ‘round season on trout would do no, harm itleaves me cold. What good mu it do or what useful purpose it will achieve ex- cept legalize mass trout exter- mination. Why destroy wildlife that is unfit for, burpan consump- ‘! A " .l wouldn’t of 5 ‘, that W £50m: to tat-row, é litter or cuttingup a cow for beef that was 'due to calve in a couple of months. It: would not, only be a waste of valuable ‘nieatrbut contrary'to the laws of ture in the bargain. to] strongly that the 3) city given the recommenda- tion that a year ‘round season on Wat will]! do the species no harm is 8, body blow to our sport. and 71. 0.1.L. "AMMUNITION AT LOWEST PRICES, 18? GREAT GE and angling for trout. Salmon- pEcoYs PRICED To SUIT YOUR BUDGET 9 CLEANING EQUIPMENT HAND WARMERS GROUND SHEETS, LIFE PRESERVERS ALL SIZES ALL THIS AND MORE AT Where Will This Year's lGrey Cup Final Be Played ously approved. He said that after the Toronto meeting the P‘NlE sent a contract to Harry McBrien, secretary of the C‘RU. who met Vancouver of- ficials Sept. 8 and appeared to find the contract satisfactory “af- ter minor changes." NO OFFICIAL WORD The PNE then sent the amended contract to Halter but has had no onficial word from him since, the statement said. “However, it has since been learned that Mr. Halter disagreed with the terms of the contract and circularized a letter to mem- ber clubs of the league! pointing out the items to which he took exception. He has not yet con- tacted the PNE officially to out- line hese points of exception." In Winnipeg, Halter denied To- ronto reports that he had written to the nine professional clubs ask- ing for permission to change the site of the classic to Toronto's Varsity Stadium if a rehtal agree- ment could not be reached with Vancouver officials. smelt: spawn in the‘salme man- ner u trout but there is not much danger of anyone sticking their necks out and advocating a year open season on salmon, smells and harried lobsters. There are commercial interests involved and the back-lash would be something to hear. Why Dr. Smith added the riders to the Year long seal son on trout to wit: enforce the regulations governing the daily bag limit of 20 trout per day and me completely baffled. ARE INDEBTED We are indebted to our trout biologists for the information that a mature female trout will de- posit several thousand eggs dur- ing the spawning season and that only an approximately ten per- cent of the hatched fry survive the early stages of their lives. At that a mature female would pro- duce an approximate 300 of her kind to furnish sport for anglers. I wonder if any biologist will ans- wer this question: “How many daily bag limits of trout would an angler obliterate, if, in a sin- gle day he chught 20 female trout in the spawning stage. ' lit has been my experience that too many trout are killed on the spawning beds by poachers as. is is without legalizing the crime.‘ I have visited spawning springs that had been decimated and the long poles with gaff-s attached, hooked over the limbs of trees in readiness for the next poach- er. . .if there were any left to pooch. About 15 years ago in late November lyisited a spring the head of Wright‘s Dam. . now Andrew’! at East Royalty. There were 28 or 30 large trout on the spawning bed. Some were in the five pound bracket and when they: scouted into the shallows their. backs were above the water. 1 went back between Christmas and New Years and. what a mess!, I' found first both the entrances-rid ‘in. readiness for the next pooh- ‘lned off wire. Therewds onie small trout left and it was hiding under a log. A Jeep had backed down to the spring edge, (I, sup- pose .to have the take loaded aboard. and got bogged down. It must have taken the poachers an NE HOM 0 gr “FIRES’I‘ONE TOWN '86 COUNTRY TIRES FOR. MUD 01% SNOW” DIAL 554? hour to get it lacked out and their ‘ HUNTERS! ALL SIZEGUNS. , v x “"coME IN TODAY” no ‘fishing through the ice—has. Losorda Named MVP For I958 MONTREAL (CPI—JDhe Inter- national League announced Wed- nesday that Tom LaSorda. Mont- real Royals' ace southpaw, has been inn-med the triple A Circuit's most valuable pitcher tor 1958. The announcement was made through league headquarters. LaSorda was the league‘s lead- ing pitcher with 18 victories. In the voting he nosed out Bobby Tiefenauer, Toronto relief hurler whose earned-run average of 1.89 was the league's best in more than a decade. LaISorda had 248 points to Tie!- enauer’s 240. ~ There were eight pitchers in the poll, one from each club selected in an earlier primary. Points for the remaining six: Bennie Daniels, Columbus, 1933, Dick Ricketts, Rochester; ‘ 139;. Freddie Rodriguez. Buffalo, 119; B ob Wiesler, Richmond, '190, Milne Cuellar. Havana, 88. and Mickey Mchermott, Miami, 78. LaSonda, 31, is a native of Not- nistOWn, Pa. Last year's winner was Don Johnston, Toronto righthander is now with San Francisco Giants. Rangers Sign 2 More Regulars NBAGARA FAIIJLS, Ont. (GB)— The signing of two more of last season’s regulars plus the stamp of approval put on this year’s training'camp by the visiting Gen. John Reed Kilpatrick highlighted the sixth day of pro-season drills b New Yonk Rangers here. he latest additions to the fold signed by general manager Muzz Patrick were captain and centre player George (Red) Sullivan and all-star defencerhan Bill Gadsby. Among the New York brass who attended were Eddie Shore, owner-manager of Springfield In- dians: Frank Boucher, manager .of Saskatoon Quakers; Art. Chap man of Vancouer Canucvks scouts Johnny Gagnon and Jack Toupin of Trois - Rivieres, and owner brushed up the bank. I learned the offense took place on Box- ing Day. I also was satisfied in my own mind who were respon- sible .for {is outrage but not enough evidence for a Court case. AWAIT OUTCOME ' Many are waiting to see what the outcome of this season ex- tesnwion will be. It was sponsored by the Provincial Fish and Game Association and I would like ém opportunity to read the/ minutes of the different Branch Associations and find out how many were at. sun on am am uaqm campus; portant decision was taken. In- formation received alleged there were only 9 members present at one Branch. For these who enr. joy their fish and eggs combined its everyone to their own, taste. As for this columnist I take my trout straight. NEWPORT, RI. (CP)——Oue of the backers of Britain‘s Ameri- ca’s Cup challenger dropped a hint Thursday that the crew of the U.S. defender, Columbia, may be "over-raced and a little stale.” Meanwhile. the weather-beaten professional skipper of the chal- lenger, Sceptre, proclaimed the English crew “fresh, cheap and eager for action." ‘ “Racing crews must be built up to to fine edge like football teams." said Capt. St a n1 e y Bishop. “Our boys are in a per- fect firsme of mind. They are not tense. They are ready.” Bishop, a Wryealrdold sailing vet- eran from Southampton, will be in charge of the Sceptre when the first of the bes‘t-of—seven series begins Saturday.‘ This is Britain’s first challenge for the world's most honored yachting trophy in 21 years. It has never left the U.S. since the schooner America first. captured it in 1851. Bishop's father and grandfather took part in unsuccessful cup chal- lenges in the past. PRESS CONFERENCE The suggestion of possible stale- mess in regard to Columbia’s crew came up at a 35-minute press con- ference attended by Sir Peter Hoare, a member of the British syndicate that built Sceptre; Cmdr. T. A. D. Bed-dington, the ofificial spokesman, and Lt.-Cmdr. Graham Mann, the helmsman. "Mann was asked if he thought there might be 'a disadvantage i the fact that Sceptre has not he a single race whereas Columbia has logged 692 nautical miles in 29 elimination races. "Quite possibly," he replied. Beddington quickly interjected the comment that there might be disadvantages in Columbia’s ser- ies of trials, which lasted several weeks, and that the crew might be stale from too much racing. “Is something you got from observa- tion?” Bedding-ton was asked. “From observation," Bedding- ton replied. Hartack Rides , 2000Ih Winner ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. (AjP)-— Jockey Willie Ha'ntack rode the 2,000th winner at his career'Wed- nesday scoring on Herald Wind in the fifth race at the Atlantic City track. Hartaok, the United Sta-tes’ leading rider in each of the last three years, wou his 186th of the year on Herald Wind. He missed on tour mounts earlier after push- ing his total to 1,999 Tuesday on Miss Royall in the fourth race. A V MAIN BRAcE NAVAL VETERANS . ' WILL‘HOLD‘ ' .THEIR‘ REGULAR MEMBERS DANCE FRIDAY — 9.30 - 12.30 1 Music by the Mariners Orchestra 1 ? Refreshments. this wishful looking or. Britisher Says Crew Of Sceptre Eager For Action Mann, 34, was subjected to con‘ siderable grilling. Mann said he felt “we have a very good chance of winning.” EXPRESSES CONFIDENCE Queried‘ on whether he was more or less confident after see- ing Columbia in action, be said: “M o r e confident. Something seen is much less owe-inspiring than the unknown." ' Mann discussed some tedmical phases of the Sceptre but clammed up on others, including 11 ,w malny sails she has readyfor use. “We wouldn't Want to reveal that." He is pleased with Sceptre‘s sunken cockpits, a contrast to the American boat’s flush deck, and believes it an advantage. Mann said the Sceptre has not shipped water in all her sailing-4nd, he added, she won-it unless heeled to 3 Wayne angle, a most un- likely occurrence. His other observations were that the weather was about what he expected; Sceptre had stolen an idea of ji‘bbiug from watching the U.S. crews who cut seconds ofif the procedure; he is mainly concerned about the fog that comes in quickly. SCEPTRE IDLE While Columbia tested herself again against Weatherly, one of the yachts she eliminated in the trials, Sceptre, continued to have her sails tidied and hull rubbed down by her crew at the New- port shipyard. Mann said Sceptre would return to the water late Friday or early Saturday, just before the first race. , Sailing enthusiasts by the bud dreds poured into this seaside re- sort, many of them coming by pri- vate boats. The weather, miser- ably wet Thursday, is wheduled to clear today with winds between 15 and 25 knots. The opinion [still persists among seasoned yachtsmen that Sceptre is a heavy weather boa-t. She is a foot shorter than Columbia at the water line: some five tons heavier, and carries only 15 square feet more sail. sums IMPORTANT Much depends on the start and in this respect Columbia has had the opportunity of sharpening up against one of the best crews in the U.S.—that of the 19~yeaar-Old Vim which severely tested col-um- bin in the elimination trials. Sceptre’s crew has been practis- ing starts against the American yacht Gleam, which has been us- ing her engines at times to give added speed. ' There will be two alternate courses—one triangular, the other windward-leeward. The windward- 1ee'ward, to be used for the first, third, fifth and seventh races, will be six, miles on a leg, twice around the course. The triangular course will be eight miles on a leg, once around. ROYAL BALL MONTE CARLO, Monaco (Reu- iers)—Prince Rainier and Prin- cess Grace will preside over a huge charity ball at New York’s Waldorf Astoria Hotel in Decem- ber, palace sources said Wednes- day. The royal couple is expected to leave for the United States some time after the Mones» gasque Nation-a1 Fete Nov. 19. * slortoyour . hunting ‘ l I ‘ ‘ . a , Stephenme kmweldee‘l' Ind everything yee'l for e maid eedsee...henbeen iemmunlfienlhfltep "W: m . you‘lloppreve. " ““'\ r accounts $2.00 4 Gel lender Pep end Fewer within IO miles ‘1 er leeey lets-led v Rialone to insure to the new-car feelin I! difloned engines—perm": normal Ian—Iodide, adequate lubrication Ilh Adv-m. at This lililed Rislene introductory ones Use This Coupon And Slve $I.OO_ Tear out this 06. Fill in the make, year and license number of your car. Take this ads to your Rislone dealer today—he has been authorized to allow you $1.00 of? on a regular $2.00 quart can of RISLONE. Offer expires Odober 31, I958. u"... By............................. n him”, ........................... .. SAVE IHIS AD...II’S WUBIH $1.00 RISLonE * specuol 3t doyoffci... For over 26 years thousands of Canadian motorists have used operation of their engines and to protect ow, Rielona makes this special 30 day offer to give all Cans inn motorists an opportunity to try, Rislone in their care. Here’s what you can expect:— Fnee flicking vulva 0 llImInuhs noise In hydraulic valve "Hm 0 Tune: up sIuggIsh engines 0 Keep: Ihem running more quiflly, smoothly I Absorb: power-robbing gums and sludge 0 Realms In! compassion and power I Foeimme break-In of new or recon- Keepa oil free, even in sub-zen wedhev, for quicker Mug Ind ‘ Mr. Dealer: Ask your supplier how Ihk coupon may be redeemed. driving speeds Immediately 0 EATT a MocRAE LIMITED - Buster. “treet- Fri., Sept. 19, 1958 The. Guardian Page ! Probable Pitchers NEW YORK (AP) —- Probable pitchers for today’s major league games (won—lost records in break. ets). National League Los Angeles at Chicago Maur- iello (0-1) vs Briggs (5—4) or Hill- man (4-8) ' San Francisco at St. Louis—Go- mez (9-12) or. McCormick (ll-8 vs Mizell (1043). , .' Milwaukee at Cincinnati (N)— Ja-y (7-5): or Willey (9-5) vs New- combe (6-13) Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (N1 -—Witt (9-2) vs Cardwell (2-5) American Icague New York at Baltimore (N)— Mans (10-8) vs Portoca-rrero (14- 11) Washington at Boston (N J—Pas- cual (8-10) or Valentine-mi (5-4) vs Brewer, (11-12). ‘ Chic-ago at Kansas City (N)— Wyun (14-14) vs Terry (10-131 Cleveland at Detroit -- 'McLish (15-17) vs Foyta-ck (13-12). CZECHS JAIL RIVALS VIENNA (AIP)-A Czechoslovak Communist court at Pardutb'ice has sentenced six workers to prison terms up to 12 yea-rs on diarges of high treason and anti- Com-munist activity, Prague reported Wednesday. Towing Service Day Phone 9722 Night Phone 8048 - 8856 Member D. A A. ~ ‘ MURPHY’S SERVICE STATION Radio I Halifax Woman IOO On Tuesday HALIFAX (CP) —- Mrs. Katie Snow celebrated her 100th birth- day here Tuesday and now looks ' forward to her brother John's 102nd‘birthday party Sept. 24. Mrs. Snow, a native of Quoddy on Nova Scotia‘s Eastern Shore, has two younger sisters—Maggie, 96, and J-anie, 92, both residents of East Qucddy, N.S. , ‘The centenarian's chief amuse- ments these days are going for drives, watching television and reading. She attends church reg- ularly. Each morningshe is bustl- ing around her son’shome sharp ' still am. Eighty-five "guests at- tended her birthday party—coma plete with a loo-candle cake. Mrs. Snow has a daughter, Mrs. J. J. Johnston, Minto, N.B., three sons, 10 grandchildren, 30 great? grandchildren and four great grandchildren. Her brother John still lives In East Quoddy. near where he was born in 1856. great- HORSE RACE At Strawberry Rac'e Track —-— Saturday September 20th All Horses Welcome , Ladies in Free w" DIRECT FROM TEXAS THE FABULOUS I ' SPORTS $1,000 Charlottetown, LEI; l ADULTS ROGERS-RODEO : ’WITH COWBOY ROY JENSEN AND MOVIE HORSE "TRIGGER IR."\ IN PERSON! I ARENA TONIGHT 8J5 . FRIDAY 4:15 and 8:15' SATURDAY 3 PM. and 8:30 To you IF YOU CAN RIDE "‘an svn" THE BIG BAD MULE — 10 SECONDS. Plus the one and only ORIGINAL LONE RANGER {‘32 BIG ACTS BUCKING HORSES! ” "Claude The Clown" R O G E R S Moonshine Dancing Donkey ' Smokey- Movie wonder Horse Whip Crackers Cowboys — Cowgirls NEVER BEFORE -- NEVER AGAIN '00 PLUS TAX KIBDIES Ix.