v if ‘V 4 Yr as WORKING OUT HiIS PAINS Y. A. Tittle. New York Giants quarterback, tosses the ball around at Yankee Stadium yesterday under the watchful eyes of head coach Allie Sherman. rookie quarterback Gary Woods, center. Badly bruis- ed about the ribs in last Sun- day's game with Pittsburgh. left, and HUNTER’S CORNER Trout Season Is Criticized; Black Duck Outlook Is Poor The speckled trout season has six more days to go. Rainbow trout, being spring spawnera, may be legally fished until Oct- ober 3lst.1 have heard some caustic comments by a number of trout fishermen regarding the extension of the season from September 15th 30th. Many feel it was an ill timed gesture by a minori-ty group anglers to which the Depart- ment concerned agreed to with- out delving into the facts an motives behind this move. There is a strong feeling among a large number of ardent trout fishermen that the September 30th closing date should be set back to September 15th. Trou‘t have been caught this week full of roe the size of tapioca. Such trout are totally unfit for table use as they are inclined to ‘mushy’ in the pan with no more know of one two pound female trout that was» thrown out after it was taken home it was flabby and strong smelling. This columnist cast his last ‘ line on September 14th. It was a sort of test case...if the trout are up to par in table quality okay —- if not the rod is stored away until next spring. My first strike was solid and the action was lively. It was traded after se- veral sharp rushes and proved , to be an 8 inch female with full, rounded sides. On examination fore it reaches the boiling point. It was in sharp contrast to t'le long cluster of pinhead sized Yellow roe one finds earlier in the season. Needless to say the rod was disjointed and put under cover until next spring. Several trout season open on April lat and end September . lath than the one we In Charlottetown took another look at our trout fishing closing I. are destroyed during the last two weeks of tile season than during any three months prior to September 15th. l The black duck outlook lrdent duck and goose hun Their first question was: has I] a Lopen water. 'Durin so‘ enactment of Fisheries Office ‘v ducks — ninety five percent of this total in Kings and Queens counties. Not a single black duck was ever observed west of Summerside. The headwaters of the Du nk River held the ma- jority of the few hundred count- ed in Prince County. Winter poaching was given as b the cause. Unfortunately this ’1 ~virus was carried‘to Queens and Kings. About five years ago dur- ing a winter of intense cold and vicious snow storms only a few heavy springs and the mouths o a few creeks, like Miller's Creek for instance. held any thatr winter an approx 150 black ducks win- tering at Miller’s Creek and Ap- ple-tree creek were shot down to practically bile last duck by juveniles with 22 cal rifles and o rabbit hunters. In fact after the an. canal-h, Charlottetown, an. sept. 25, '1934. a Bill H‘aughton Reined Colt I Tittle hopes to be able to play against the Washington Red- skins. in the National League opener in ew York tomorrow . ,SS.000.000 or Athletics' ‘, per cent of my stock for $8,000,! ' franchise, he will retain the 000. which is somatic!) ‘ess-than I e u Sbaseball club. the Yankees' established price."- “I make this announcement fl—M—fl . g . ‘for the first time." the A5) CHURCH ls PLANNED ,. By FRITZ HOWELL Red Carpet. purchased Tues Combat Time to the wire in the I the Winnings: Vicar Hanover ‘owner said. “The club will not DELAWARE. Ohio (AP) — day for $100,000 by Adrien and second heat and finished third l-X-l $24,638; Combat Timi- ‘ be sold in outside interests, And LONDON (AP) — An under- Vicar Hanover, a bay colt Gerard Miron of St. Augustin, in the deciding jaunt, took down 5-1-2 $13,984; Sheer Genius X-2-3-if my asking Price of 53.000.000 ground church with chapels {or handled masterfully by Billy Haughton, followed in the toov steps of his father, Torpid. Thursday as he won the 19t annual $66,590 Little Brown Jug for three-year-old pacers over the Delaware County Fair- grounds half-mile oval. it was the slowest Jug since 1969 but Vicar Hanover, owned by Donald D. Macfsrlane of Grosse Pointe, Mich, braved 50-degree temperatures and a wind which mounted to 25 miles r per . Vicar won 924,689, boosting his 1964 earnings to $79,390. he speedy winner, son of the 3' in 2:02 and came back to win the third in 2:01. Combat Time, owned by the Tamarack Farms of Paine:- vil-le. Ohio, and driven by Bruce Nickells of Orlando, Fla., took the second heat in the day's fastest time of 2:00 4-5. and had the deciding heat locked up until the last 80 yards. L'ED ALL THE WAY . Combat Time, son of 1949 winner Good Time, led all the way in the deciding heat until Vicar Hanover in late in the stretch and won by less than a length. Thursday's race, witnessed by about 35,000, gave Haughton of Gian Head. N.Y, his second County Deux Montagnes. Que.. finished third in the first heat. by Lyss Hanover. Sheer Genius. which chased ' ou in Kansas City. Finley Charles FINIeY lgid p'ihht he was iniorm’tg these interests $8,000,000 was Statement his one and only offer. “The Yankees valued 100 per KANSAS CITY 'APl—Charles cent of their stcck at 314.0000“) 0. Finley said Thursday if Kan-j and sold 80 per cent to CBS '13; 000. I am offerin" \3 ,sas City interests will not pay‘Sll,200 $7.990; yss Hanover 2-X~liis not met Within the next few‘ .$6.992; Red Carpet 3-X-5 $3,995. days by Kansas City interests Senator Burton X-3-9 $2,996; ‘ the club definitely will be taken Lathan V-X-G $1.997: MCMUO off the market and I will con- X-t-ii $1,997; About Time S-X-r ‘tinue to own and operate tile club and strive for a championg h. $7,990 which also went into 1e Haughton wallet. Sheer Genius and Vicar Hanover are stable- the Church of England, Roman Catholic and Free Church (an. offshoot of the Presbyterian Church of Scotland) is planned for London airport. An airport after being nipped at the wura mates. Combat Time, seeking to be- come the second Ohio Sena-tor Burton. owned by Roland Lariviere of Hull. Que... $998; li'on Rail X-S—RO $998; H . I itended I - i to in the Ju ,wa‘s 4-to-b - . I .s in team. spokesman said it s n ' 1“:qu Quintin" an "m limit“ I; the «Ewing hear, l R‘ppmg Good 6'30- Regal Yau'y The owner said he had been to keep the churcr open night PIC!“ UP $19,994 but couldn't may, it 01 up kee X-6~R0; Adios Frisco 7-Ri). approached by six different and day. Combat Time. with his 1-2‘ In the deciding heat, Vicar Hanover paid $3.60, $2.20 and‘ $3.00 and Combat Time $2.20 and $2.00 Sheer Genius, as p91). of the entry, paid the same as ‘ Vicar Hanover. Here's how they finished in the two - division classic with i PROBABLE W sip 9% GRAND Iii-OPENING " MONDAY. SEPT. 23. 7.30 P. M. BASILICA RECREATION CENTRE major league games, with won- Also Every Monday, Thursday Nights, 7.30 P.Mi. finish, was second and picked up $13.9“ P.K.'s Defeat Bricklayers MatthexolCDis- Maritime Bricklayers 9-3. Gor- die Bowtle hurled his third Will for PK's. Ed Hartinger was the losing pitcher. Lloyd Blan- chard, John Gormley and Wayne Gallant all had 2 hits in 4 ap- pearances for the winners. Mic- key Hughes led the losers‘ at- tack with I z-for-s performance. Bill Chapman and .limm Hughes each had a 2 for 4 night. This exhibition urics resumes Sunday at 3 pm. with the PK's leading the series 2-0. Linescores: Bricklayers 000 0120—3 10 3 Power Kings — 160 110x —- 9 9 2 Washington. Narum (9-14) (N). Baltimore, Bunker (17-5) at Cleveland, Tiant (9-3) (N). .; Chicago, Pizarro (17-9) at} Kansas City, O'Donoghue (9-12); (N). Boston, Wilson (11-11) at De-‘ troit, Wickersham (18-12). .innesota, Kaat (17-8) at Los Angeles, Chance (19-8) (N). ‘ atlonal League v Jug conquest. He won in 1956 with Quick Chief. Two Canadian horses - Red Carpet and Senator Burton finished fifth and sixth respec tively in the third heat. Rcd Carpet picked up $3,995 and Senator Burton $2,996 for their efforts. night. (AP Wirepboto) six month prosecution period. had passed 1 was given the-’ names of a number of the cul- prits. A concentration of an apol proximate two hundred and fifty 1 black at Clerks Creek. also on the Hillsboro River. were praco they left as soon as they we rei wiped out by 22 cal rif- same winter. The crack of a twenty-two does not carry very far ln ten or fifteen beow zero. I was told one who knows that the winter counts by plane were stopped a year or so ago because there were practi- tically les cally no black ducks to c ou nt. From over eleven thousand lack ducks to a pal few hundred in approximately five years is nothing to be proud of. This week i talked to Emmett Wisener, Watervale. He told me he only w two small bunches of blacks this fall in his dam —- a four and a six where a few years ago there would be a mi- nimum of 150. In the Orwell ar- as its the same sad story. checked this week... not a sin- what happened the black ducks in their area. I was to] the there were a lot of black duc'lla ‘rafted' outside. They they didn’t know where they came'from but they definitely didn't come from Orwell unless able to fly. The ducks ‘rafted’ outside are in all probability Am- erican Scoter ducks. They are a salt water species that are slight- ly smaller than blacks. Black ducks have a purple speculum. bordered with white on e wing, which distinguishes them from the Scoters. Teal ducks show an increase of approximately 15 per cent but teal will never take the place of the highly primd blacks. To the non-observance of game law hunters who scoff at bag limits and seasons 1 have this to say — there is no point in crying ov- er spilled milk. You are now reaping the crop you sow- ed with abandon. In this column I warned you what was coming a few short years ago. Opening morning shooting with respect gle black duck observed at Lougheran's creek and marsh. Moss Lake devoid of ducks... in miniature Sahara Desert. 1 ask- ed two duck hunters at Orwell » 3rd or THE 'FAll REE-FOR-AllS Included In an Exciting 8 Dash Program to black ducks will depend large- ly on the number of northern red legs present on the morning of the fifteenth of October. ‘ ‘ ( - 0) END MINE STRIKE Piiiigdvglgiii: siié’ifiiéy” lilz-gl SALT LAKE CITY (AP)—- ' More than 4,000 Kennecott Cop- per Corporatio n employees were back at work Saturday at North America's largest open DOOR PRIZE, FREEZEOUTS, JACKPOT American League . New York. Bouton (17-13) ati All Proceeds For Charitable Purposes . % 2 St. Louis, Taylor (8-4) or- Richardson (3-2) at Pittsburgh, Cardwell (1-0) (N). San Francisco. Perry (11-10) at Chicago, Buhl (1:413). . Los An . . eles, L. Miller (4-8): pit mine, in Blngham Canyon, g8 (7.9) at Houston,» o/ west of this city. A three-year Bruce (14-9) (N). ‘ ¢ Admission 35c contract settlement ended a 80- day 5 like t made idle up to 10,000 men in Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah. Cincinnati, Maloney (19 - 1m: and Purkey (10-9) at New York,‘ Jackson (10 - 15) and Fisher (1016) 2, Twi-N. °o HENDERSON & C‘UDMO‘RE . . . LOOK WHAT'S AHEAD FOR FALL ' IN 8 “NET S © N H. a c. BRING YOU P.E.l.'S LARGEST SELECTION OF STETSON HATS, FOR FALL UNDER FIRST THE FRI SEPT 25th RACE 0, o LIGHTS 7:45 P.M. RACE! 1 - I [’1' O—MYBNA T. CLEGG 7—PAULA CLEGG I—IOB’I GIRL RACES I-‘I l—AMIGO m I—AUDBIY’I PRIDE l—IVELYN’! ABDINT L—DlPLOMATE ROYAL G—CAPTAIN WAY T—POPLAR [DIN l—WAY MON 3—UNCLE AL S—EETTIE’B 4—mss FLA S—MEADOW o—DOT'S BOY 7—McGEE V l—VERNON l—AN’I’HONY Charlottetown Driving Park FREE-FOR-ALL RACES I - I BOY MINGO GENERAL 0140 . RIVER GAL RACE! 4 - l L. Come ahead - - - try one on. Chances are you'll find the exact shape and col- coIour (and there are many). in your proper size - - - or the price you wont to pav- STETSON HATS 12.95 to 20.00, Mallory by § TET S Q N Sporty In Character . . . Dress styles too. . . silk finish and smooth finish. Many styles in the new fall shades from which to I From 8.95 Sport Styles Gay colorful casual suedel. orlnted felts and cloth hats by SStetson. The assortment of shades. bands and shapes will amaze you . . . Go I minutes for a try on? 5.95 to, 9.95 HAT STYLES FROM I860 to I964 Drop by and sec oilr hat window. which this week features styles and colours of yesteryear. Including such famous styles as the Beaver Top f 1860. And of course a most up to date selection of styles and colours for fall and winter '64 and ‘65. The dozen 0 ol mers are on display through the courtesy of John B. Stetson (Canada) Ltd. .1 I | I l _______..__l HERE ea00COO-IOOOIIOOOOOOOIIIOOUIO...o...O...OOOCOIIOOIOOOOOOIOOOOIIIoe-we—e l I I I L