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St. - Charlottetown, P.E.l. -- Phone 1978 x Back Stretch (continued from V Page 0) total at the end of this week is ex- pected to be over forty. The fol- lowing Halifax owned horses are new stabled there-the Bunny Walker stable with Merle Direct. Doctor L. B., Seven Up.Dltee.i. Faye W.. Helen J. Direct and law McKinney: Angie Allen with day Law and Aubrey Budlong; Balbo Gould with O. K. Volo. Luther Hanover. Veils Gratteu and Pro- testor's Boy. and frank Daniels with Starlight Eclipse. Jerry Grat- tau. Buck P. C. Grattan and Christopher Stout. On the cover of the May IOIII Harness Horse er, photos of races at Santa Anita and on page three is the following explanation of the photos - - - Santa Anita Speedway-Proximity (I-Iodgina) equals the track trotting record of 2.01 1-5 in her season's debut. The eight year old daughter of Protector defeating Egan Hanover 4, 1.59 in Saturday's 52,500 Free- For-All. -'- - A pair of Nova Sco- tlans ramp to victory Canadian style. as Brewer's Gallon and Joe O'Brien win their third start from Phalanx (Cdbb). The Bill Gallon stallion, owned by B. C. Crulck- shank of Halifax. N. 5.. slashed his- mark to 2.03 with speed in re- serve. - - - Joe O'Brien scores with Robert Morris in tight win. lower- ing the Volovmite pacer's record to 2.01 3-5 in a neck score from Ebonita (Shively). Dale Brewer (Kent) and Concert Master (Fitz- patrick) fourth. The event was a qualifying trial for the 57,500 Bur- bank Pace and O'Brien also cop- ped the other division with Lana Direct in 2.01 4-5. Almost every day horses are moving into stalls at the Chat- lottetown track, the latest is the stable of Earl Semple with Mary Merk, Jessie Direct 2nd and Hilda Mac. Other stables there are Jissy Arblng's. Dr. R. F. Sea- man's, Sam Kennedy's. Teddy Weir's. Lorne and Willard Kelly's ” 'andr1.en OMcara's. "l'hercom-bin- ed Kelly stables will consist of about ten. Teddy Weir expects to have ten and Ike Moreside will move in next week with eight. George Thompson of Summerslds is also expected down the first of the week with Babe Britten 2.10 3-5. Besides the above some twenty Tile Neighbors ' - ' a..5tEE7...i.--'-..-a.. 'He Just finished. Wouldn't touch the milk and I had to eat the chop for him." . v .-.-. By George Clark I carrots, spilled his I PRICED TO DLEAR and Tractors at greatly reduced prices:- USED DIIIIS: 1931 CHEVROLET SEDAN I934 DODGE COACH 1939 PONTIAC COUPE 1942 CIIEVEOLET SEDAN 1937 AUSTIN SEDAN 1947 STUDEBAKER SEDAN IISED TRIIDIIS: 1944 xi INTERNATIONAL 1944; xss INTERNATIONAL 1944 its INTERNATIONAL 1947 l(1.lN'l'ERNATl0NAI., Panel - 1047 MEROIJRY. 1-ron Pick-up lees llns INTERNATIONAL, with hoist 1949 nonos. 1-2-Ton Pickup 1949 IIEROURY, I-Toa . 1987 OIIEVROLET, 1-2-Ton Plekup. IISED TRADTDRS and IIDIIIIIEIIV F-20 l'AlIHALIa. TAIIIALL "CUB" F nu"-'-...'l WW) USED 10 HOE DRILL One Iron Two-Bow P0! 10 PLANTEB (IIIedE5.days)--New 10:0. Oarloradegf new Farnsall "B" TRACTOR! Just an- W. in. I08-212 Great George sc. (nluloumn We are offering the following Used Cars, Trucks or thirty horses owned by various parties in Charlottetown and sur- rounding parts are being trained at the Exhibition oval. The beautiful pacing mare Mary Mark 2.08 3-5 has been staked ex- tensively through the state of Maine and after racing in I few events here will be taken to the Pine Tree State where she should take a low record. Mary Merl: won ten dashes last season and shared honors with Worthy Er- mine as having paced the fastest mile by a more in the Mari-tlmes- 2.08 3-5. Her owners, Earle Sem- ple and Harold Cudlnore. have had several good offers for Mary but are going to give her a real chance In the big company. We thank George MacDonald, Boston. for a clipping from the Sunday Globe which shows a photo of a bad crash at Yonkers Raceway a week ago. Two trot- tors, Moses 2.03 and Aimee Scott 2.04 1-2 were down. The third horse was also down but managed to get up. Suikies were smashed and drivers injured -certainly a bad affair. Secretary D. Stuart Campbell sends us particulars of the June 5th races to be held at the Tantra- mar Race Track. Sackvillc. N. B. 2.21 class. purse 3200; 2.21 class. purse 5150; 2.20 class, purse 5150. Heats are half mile and the races on the three-heat plan with trol- ters allowed three seconds over pacers. Entrlu close June in at midnight. Entrance fee three per cent from money winners only. Ed Blnneweg in his harness rac- ing column in a New York paper writes - - - ''I like the new start- ing system employed by Steve Phillips but wonder whether it will cause some tight Jams at. Roosevelt unless Steve can get the car out of the way ll little quicker. Right now they blame the slowness of the car to leave on the bad foot- ing at Yonkers. I believe that Yonkers Raceway is laid out about 90 feet longer with 40 feet taken off at each turn to bring the back stretch closer. This gives the horse an extra 100 feet from the starting line to the first turn going away." - - - Our comment on the above is that the longer straightaway and lhc sharper turn is probably what caused the bad C-Z'C5(o”c.yis c z i TI-IE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETQWN accident mentioned above. You cannot take a short turn on high with agfoty. .. Jack Curnow. sports writer for the San Francisco Examiner. has the following big boost for Joe O'Brien. - - - "The aulky brigade swings in action again today at Santa Anita. the week being high- lighted by a series of static races which will bring out the cream of the harness racing crop tuning up for the 550.000 Golden Wat Pace and Golden West Trot. Ilean- whils the twobuck bettors fol- lowing the sulklea are fast mak- ing Joe O'Brien the guy to bet on in the big races. The little Cans. dian has been scoring with tor- rific regularity when the chips are down. Willie it's not too hard to gain the sentiment of the public. It's a much tougher chore to gain praise from the guys against whom you compete, es. peclally the veterans. But O'Brien has drawn high praise from another driver over the week end. a man not given to paning out Iaudatory comments freely. Harry Whitney. driver of Chris Spencer and among the Grand Circuit's most famous reins- man. told friends be regarded Joe O'Brlsn the best young driver of current times. Whitney went on To” say he believes one of i.hTbEit' drives he ever witnessed was when little Joe piloted Robert Morris to victory last Saturday against a top field. In case you missed that race. O'Brien brought Robert Morris from far back in the pack to nail Ebonltn at the wire for a nose win in the 57500 Burbank Pace. O'Brien, with a small public stable. has been cracking the charmed circle with regularity. Seldom an odds-on favorite, O'Brien'a horses have been spill- ing the figure horses with regu- larity. He has a knack of getting the most out. of his horses and getting it when it counts. O'Brien has been driving in the U. S. only since 1047, having gotten his school- ing in Canada where 'they race for blood' rather than money. But in his first year of U. S. racing he drove 84 winners to go with 44 he had in Canada before crouing the border. That made him the top dash winner of the year. In 1048 and 1949 he was among the top winners. and it looks as though he'll be right up there again this season the way he's going at Santa Anita. In 24 starts he has 0 wins, 2 seconds and 2 thirds with money winnings of 9656.25. not bad considering his small stable. O'Brien has four straight vic- tories with Brewer's Gallon. a horse he brought out of the Cans- dlan bullrlngs to Hollywood Park last year for B. C. Cruickshank of Halifax. While the horse had a record of 12 wins in I4 Canadian- starts. it had earned but 51101. which gives one a pretty fair idea of the purses. It wound up the season with 14 wins and 3 thirds and 82701 in earnings. Last win- ter O'Brien trained the horse at Del Mar. Nov. 5. he's as sound as a dollar and his but winning time has been 2.03 flat going away. Four victories have earned the horse 5325." Mrs. Joe O'Brien in a letter to her father. James Flood of this city. writes - - - "Barbara Ann Scott. was out to the track this morning. She is in the Ice Capadcs here. They took some pictures of her and Brewer's Gallon and I will send one to you" when they are published. I wasn't there at the time so didn't get a chance to meet her. Joe says she is one of the nicest people he ever met. She went right in the stall with Brewer's Gallon and is very fond of horses." Hunters corner (continued from Plga 0) this way all by y:ul;seu?" In a confidential tone I replied: "Ihpays to travel alone when yuu are looking for a goose". His face ?'.'.'i'v'.'."'..'...!I.'.'.'i'.:.'-". '.'2..:'."l.'f. you?" I'll tell you where you can get a. goose", and proceeded to dir- ect me. "see that house on the hill . . . they're going In the fields a mile south of that". He squlnted at the sky. "Its a good goose day; you shouldn't have any trouble getting a goose this afternoon". I said goodbye. parked the car in an out-of-the-way place and started off across the fields. I I 0 later when I told my wife about it. she said: "ll that isn't a man for you. Go to Church in the mom- And you can tell why u,'..... Motors is the place to service your ear because your satisfaction is our primary eoaeern. Wahelffor sitting on and a. deep foot tron PAGE SEVEN fngmaad tell lies in the afternoon". I to explain that they were white lies but she insisted all use were the same. Oh well. If one doesn't fight fire -with fire some- times. one doesn't get very far. I I I A hundred or more geese in a large stubble field took flight be- fore I was within a quarter mile of it. I skirted tile field. Foot- prints led to it from the north. south and east. A clever blind at the edge of s hayrlck hadn't been tiled recently. neither had a, fox hole dug In a straw pue at the saith and of tile stubble seen much action. Geese steer clear of such dangrous mots when coming in to a field elpeclally lf disturbed pre- vlously. . e o I Along the bare edge on the west side a cleverly camouflaged 'goose law had been dug replete with ch. Spruce branches placed all end around the edge blended with the short bushes already there and one would almost stumble into it unless looking closely. scattered flocks of geese were on the move and I decided to move farther south. A mile and a half brought me to the Mayflelrl road. I I I From a. hill top I looked down on the beach at calwnpore. No annmc bothers dotted its bleak slurelfne. Miles off shore heavg ice glsamsd white on the cold blue waters of the Gulf. The mor- row looked bleak for the lobster flahsnnsn. A sudden chill remind- ed me that t.he sun was westering . . . evening was near. I thought of my wife's parting words: "Try and get back in time for me to go to church." It was thlce miles to the car. My afternoon patrol look- ed washed up. 0 I I My course took me past the goose pit. I was maybe twenty or twenty-five yards from it when I heard geese honking. A flock of 1'1 came in from behind. swung in to the wind and than sitting on their tails and with big black feet spread at a ridiculous angle dropped swift- More Values That Will Rock I The Island JUST ARRIVED-50 More Men's Colo GAIARDINE SUlTS- - (2 Pants)"-SPECIAL 534.50 MEN'S TOPCOATS in all shades and sizes. 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I walked past a few feet but some- thing made me turn for a closer lnqieetlon . .. the spruce bows in front were bent over at a shazp angle. I knew then that someone had been in it since I saw It last. A wedge moped piece of cloth. like a bit of brown sacking. in the loot. trench caught my eye. It wasn't till I jumped into the pit. that I spot- ted the gunner huddled in the foot trench with his gun under him 1:, and the spruce bows arched over - s 0 hlrn like a canopy. . . He came to life when I nudged turn and said, "Hey. wake up". He had a wild look in his eye but I don't know which of us got the biggest surprise. He had little to say. Asked what he was doing there he stated simply: "I got hun- gry and come looking for a goose". He had spotted me after the geese flurrled and didn't take long to .r' pnoveu . Complete Ronqe V2 to 5 TONS Series M-105 Von Iodp liizllllln Series M-Ill Dune ' ' MlIii;IIIIiII&"'mIBID III French when he got home. Then '. thought of the single wlldgoose L had seen flying in lonesome clrclel and calling in vain for a. dead mat: and whose eggs would be as bar- ren as the northern barrcns ol which they would be laid . . . . am" the sympathetic side of my hear closed with a snap. Thats thl chance gunners take when they g4 hunting wlldgeese in the spring. 38-PER-CENT INCREASE Alberta farm land values have increased from 821 an acre in 194! to :29 In 1940. act. He sure was a quick thinker and came near getting away with I relieved him of his double hammerless Belgian shotgun. He was a man 31 years of age but he made a disconaolate figure as he slumped off across the field with his brown overcoat hanging to his heels and his rubber boots going thump. clunk in the way hip rub- ber bootrhave. 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