' 8'1‘. LOUIS (AP)—sam Etch- everry. with sound arm and a season. is ready " Sam Etcheverry Ready To Show Rep Is No Fluke “And there was a lot of pres-lmark of 3,723 in 14 games. sure to make goodff Etche-,7 3"‘ l’°th°"°d by "'9 We“ 5310118 11110 arm and porous line in his fir t i 30 lh0W "19 350 _ - Foolball ver” admmed _ ‘ lyear with the Cardinals. Etclsi- League his reputatio as the P909“? “’°"d°"°d ‘f Llchefieverry completed less than 50 greatest quarterback in Cans- dian history is no fluke. Etcheverry, nicknamed l‘he Rifle by Canadian fans.‘ is loaded for a big season after being bothered all last year by a sore arm. ' “My arm is back to normal," Etcheverry said. “I’m throwing as well as ever." He has shown it with 28 completions for 308 yards in two games this year.‘ “The line this year makes a Verry. 30’YB3l‘-Old rookie In per cent of his passes for only the NFL last year. could live 1,275 yards. up to the reputation he built in Head Coach Wally Lemm of Canada. gthe Cardinals thinks etch-zverry In nine years with the Al-iis ready to take up this year ouettes, the rifle threw for over where he-left off in Canada. 30,000 yards and 183 touch-; “He can throw that ball," downs. I-le passsed for 586 yards lLemm said, “and he's a smart in one game. 32 yards bettemquarterback. Sam is still learn- than Norm Van Brocklin’s NFL‘ our offense and getting record,’ and 4.723 yards in a 14- more experience in American game season. This far sun football. He should get even passes Sonny Jurgensen's‘ NFL l better." I WHAT A RELIEF! - - ION - Pl/PRANOS/(4 5 MORE Re’!/[F 74m . A5 ' (OMB//V//V6 M’/A/5 A//p 544/55 #524 , W//YD 1/? l . n/£2; 0I’£R r//E Ia-/mm: two big difference, too.” said the former Denver University star, who later became hero in Can- HUNTER’S ‘CORNER ada with the’ Montreal Alouettes ’of e Canadian Football .. League. % “I know I can get the ball to the receivers," he said, “but I Duck Season Gets Moving have to have time. I’ve been getting good protection this I year.” The Cardinals were hit hard) ) by injuries in the offensive line‘ 3 last year and the 5-10, 190-pound , *' Etcheverry spent much of his,‘ time dodging 250-pound oppos-1 lng linemen. ‘ O Probable Pitchers, By THE CANADIAN PRESS ! Probable pitcers for today's major league games, won and E‘ lost records_in parentheses: 1' American Lea On Monday Of Next Week The dawn of the duck seasonlcliurch' Its the last place one opening is only a few days dis-ii would expect ‘poaching’ as the tant and the ‘black duck status‘) area was on the outskirts of the will have been established days before the next column appears in print. There are a number of the ‘hard to convince‘ duck; liunters who still argue that it ill be a normal opening sea- and learned that there were two breeds of black ducks hatched out at the head of this river but ionly a few members have sur- ,vived to the present. I was son with respect to our black ‘told that‘ early in the spring 7 ducks. Its not my intention to pairs of black ducks had select- argue the point further asyed the area for homemaking time, and time alone, will con-lbut only two pair lived. Jiiven-1 vince some. My thoughts drift 3 ile snipers with 22 cal rifles were 'back to the opening morning's E alleged to have been the cause. Village. I done a bit of inquiring ' Miglltown in the thirties and forties when the first glimmer of dawn broke in the east the air would . throb as squadron after squa- °5 A“E_9195 (Chance 14-10 dron of black ducks came roar- and Bowsfield 9-8 at Cleveland if mg overhead Many would con. (Grant_ 6-10 and Donovan 20-9) mnue on their favourite (2<‘:ht.w1'“ight' haunts but there were hundreds Yorkl°:“I§gutl::]y‘l7'_‘7)7‘(1I‘3I)) at New that would practically ‘bomb Only games Schedulea dive’ hunters out of their blinds ' and liideouts. It wasii’t a case in those days of worrying over targets to shoot at but whether gue Kansas City (Pfister 4-14) at Detroit (Mossi 11-13). Baltimore (Pappas 12-9) at Minnesota (Kaat 17-14) at ii League New York (Cisco 1-0 at Chi- cago (Toth 3-1). Pittsburgh (Veale1-2) at Mil- 0’ “°i “F-‘~‘ “'°““‘ 5° ‘"1 ”“" waultec (Constable 1-0) (N) beam Philadelphia (McLish 11-5) at: In some sectioiis the season Cincinnati (Ellis 11-2) (N). {has been opened already. One St. Louis (Jackson 15-11) at l morning this week I arrived at Los Angeies (Rickert 5-4) (N). l Murray Harbour at 10 minutes Houston (-l0lll1.SOI1 7-15) at San I to 7_ I had hardly stepped out F”m°'5°° (M3“°h3l 1340) (N) of the car at the dam site when :1 heard two shots from the dir- . section of Fox River in the area about midway between the ri- o_ ver bridge and its mouth. Be- At ltween that time and‘8.30 a.m. I lspaced about twenty minutes Horse races at Pinette pro- 4 apart. I smiled to myself and vided entertainment for a large ;’ thought —- ‘If I'd have been on number of fans Sa'tu‘I‘day, Sep- ithe game warden job I'd have ti-mber 22. All the classes were probably been somewhere else [heard three more single shots; lAs I have stated before an ;army of game wardens would «not be suffit-‘unit to cope with the present situation unless they ‘have the full co-operation from local residents which they are .not receiving. There is no point [in locking the stable after the horse is stolen. It doesn't pay to be in too ;much of a rush when on is lwoodland stroll. I have found ‘(that out while supervising dam ‘ construction or dam repair work. Last week I spent sever- ; al days at Orwell at the site the old Sir Andrew MacPhail dam. Often I'd take short strolls along stream-side amid the towering spruce. I noted notch- les cut in trees where in bygone iyears Sir Andrew had fashion- ed rustic seats. The dam )has been restored and its a fpei-fect woodland gem. la REAL TANTRUM T On one such stroll I saw a zsquirrel on the limb of a tall fspruce about ten feet from the ‘ ground. It was a squirrel of the year out exploring his little ,world. I judged it was a ‘he’ by #5 55/995 WW1‘? 574/-‘F W 55/7‘ 95’ 34:34:» re A/Arm; 7147:: «mm: 4 at/ax. large spruce cone in his mouth. It was so large, green and hea- vy it was all he could do to hold his head up. He watched me for a moment in silence but when he opened his mouth to scold me the cone dropped to. the ground. I guess he blamed me for this little accident and did he ever fly into a tantrum. He worked himself into such a state his two hind feet were beating a tattoo on the limb so hard that small segments of bark drifted to the ground. By the time I moved on he was in °f a state bordering on collapse. He reminded me of little hu- man two legged characters I have seen lying on their backs on the floor and beating~a tat- too with their heels. I was told of an incident that happened recently over beaver flooding a highway. They would plug the culvert every night so one of the men hit upon an in- genious idea — so he thought. A long section of pipe was bur- ied in the stream bed with one end laid level with the stream bed. The idea was that after the bridge was plugged by the well filled and there was lots of . where it would be as quiet as a his actions. He was holding a I beaver and the water rose about 02-977 mm! ./1/ow, /96! v /9;: mnrgvrerw 10 ThoGnnrdinn,Oiisrlottotown.l'rl.,!ept.z8,1902' ---5:vAlunMav_¢ mfifimfii two feet, which wouldn't inter- fere with the road bed, it would drain off and the water ie vel would remain stable. One of the Engineers chuckled to himself the next morning when he saw the culvert plugged and the water draining through the 'pe. He didn't laugh the next morning for the cagey beaver had discovered the under water leak and the pipe was plugged solid. Methinks the beaver can match wits with mere man and win more frequently than he loses... Its a toss up. By THE CANADIAN PRESS The smallest Wrigley Fi crowd of the season-617 paid- watched 22 year old southpaw anced his record at 9-9. Rookie Cal Koonce took the loss~—his tenth against as many victories. The Phillies scored three times in the first two inn- ings to send the Cubs down to their mind loss, 14 of them shutouts. Catcher Clay Dalrymple hit his 11th home run for the Phil- lies leading off against rookie Fred fourth of five Cubs pitchers. early St. Louis outburst that stoodup for a 7-4 victory over San Francisco washing out most of th Giants’ pennant hopes. Stan Mmial hit five singles in a perfect day at bat for the w ers. Willie Mays killed one Giant rally by strolling off third base and with two on in ninth victory that shov the Giants Dennis Bennett blank the cubs -Each team has three games on five hits in pitching Phila- to play after '1‘ursday- delphia to a 7-0 victory '1‘hurs- The Giants had won three day 3 chicago_ straight to halve the It was fast - finishing le8d- b 8! the? ‘E Pmmesl mh mumph in the glsiove Candleglick Pails: ‘until past 24 games. Bennett bal- Ed e ,3 three_ puck 2% games behind Na L688“ ladin Les, Ansel teadofwith two outin ‘ "lath." were Holler e e , pending Thursday night’: dod- ger-lloiiston same. u homer made the game close in the seventh ' . Washburn. a 24 - year - rookie right hander, was just wild enough with his fast ball balls. He is now 12-9. St. Louis rattled 10 hits of! Giants’ starter Billy 0’Dell in less than five s to hand him his 14th loss instead of 20th victory. But the crowning blow was Oliver's fifth inning blast off re- homer of the War. and visibly put a sag in the phoulders of the Giants. ‘ Mays typified the ownfall in the sixth inning after e doubled home a run an mov to third on an infield out. Orlando Ce- wsrd centre field. He was easily pick -2’. o . The next three hitters. ap- Beck interruptions of electric Standard Time. Saturday, STAN DINGS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS National League 5 WL Pct. GBL Los: Angeles 101 57 .639 San Francisco 99 ('1) .623 2175 Cincinnati 96 .600 Pittsburgh 91 67 .576 10 Milwaukee 85 74 .535 16 St. Louis 81 78 .509 20% Philadelphia 81 78 .509 20 Houston 62 94 .397 38 Chicago 57 102 .358 44% New York 39 118 .248 61% A INTERRUPTION NOTICE There will. be a series - of short switching power on Saturday and Sunday, September 29th and 30th, 1962 between the hours of 8:00 a.m. ' and 3:00 p.m. Atlantic The areas affected will be: September 29th — Fredericton, Hunter River, New Glasgow, North Rustico, Milton, Wheatley Oyster Bed Bridge and ' Sunday, September 30l;h—St. Eleanors, Mis- couche and Wellington. These short switching necessary to enable our crews to increase the capacity of the Hunter River Substation from 500 KVA to 2000 KVA, and commission a new transmission substation at Wellington. ' MARITIME ELECTRIC éewy lg,-«'«‘«(— River, insloe. interruptions are I competition for first place. 1 Sincere thanks is extended to Mrs (Dr.) Dave MacKenzie by the d-rectors for donating a loud speaker to the Racing Club. The presiding officials welc- Starter—J. Thomas Mclfenna. Jurlges——Robert West, N e il Morrison, and William Ross, Timers--R.A. ll/facKenzie, and John W. Macwillian. Clcrk—Cecil Mosher. RESULTS CLASS A PACE tleatlier Hal First Dreams (White) 1 2 (Albert MacDonald) 2 1 3, W.M..X. (Clarence Mac- kenzie) 4 3 2 Pepsi First (Cameron Mac)Phee) 3 Josedale Chief (Creed) 5 _owiiei by Albert Macnonaid, mes —- 2.16, 2.17, 2.16.1. SS 8 1\fervin's Boy (Baxter Ross) 1 1 3 Propane (Bernie MacPherson) 2 L‘. 1 (‘ovehcad irl (L. Ma-cDonald) 4 3 2 True M' n (Wilfred Fumess) 3 3 5 Donna H. (MacDonald) 54 6 Sonny Boy (Levi Young) 6 6 4 Marvin's Boy owned by Bax fer Ross, Propane owned by Bernie MacPherson. Times — 2.22, 2.2), 2.22. CLASS C Tommy Morgan (William Smallwood) 111 Jollty Guy (Malcolni MacDonald) 2 i 2 , Frauki. ‘Bvudlong (Lester Macftae) 3 23 1 Mac A (Radon Gillis) 5 3 4 (:.P;.1'.'l¢-as 0. (Donald Morrison 4 5 5 ‘manly Morgan owned by W!-thin Smallwood. lflmes — 2.21, 222, 2.29. may ’ K. This is whats new! ...amagnifioei1t'fliundei'birdfeeling is yours in the 1963 Galaxie, with its swept-back ailhouetlza,’ superb handling and plush interiors (including the optional swing-away steering wheel). New low price is yours with the new F “300" series, that gives you Gala.xie’s bigcar comfort and quality at alowelb Phil|iesB|a’nk.Cubs7-O; Cardinals 5 Giants (seventh inning, walked, Jose w the gled and Bsiley who homered Tom who over the right field fence. When you're on your way to a meeting, you cancount on making the right im- pression in British Woollens. You know she'll glow at your air_of downright dis- on tinction! Since the days of.Caesar, these versatile fabrics have led the way in men's fashions. 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