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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 1 Aug 1952, p. 3

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_ The Ey Palmer‘s britliant rounds of 66â€" €5â€"66â€"66 over the parâ€"72 St. Charles course put him 11 strukes wnead of Fred Haus, Jr. of New Orleans and Dick Mayer of St Petersburs, Florida, who wound vp tied for second. The fabulous shooting of the new Cansdian champion made it the most wideâ€" cpen walkâ€"away in the history of the Open. Vapor traiis from highâ€"fAying jet aircraft have been taken for flying saucers by Ontario citizens "during the last few days, the RCAF reported this week. OALMCER & JOSUPN STS. . PMOMR 24480 son, who took the Seagram Gold aup to Little Rock, Arkansas, 3 years ago; and Roberto Di Vicenâ€" zo, the Argentine champion, Jet Trails Mistaken for Flying Saucers Roche Tied for fourth spot a stroke behind Haas and Mayer were Al Zimmerman, Skee Riege! and Doug Ford, who hail from Portâ€" land, Ore., Tulsa, Okla., and Harâ€" rison, N.Y., respectively. Another 2 strokes back were Dutch Harriâ€" Johnny Palmer, a sunâ€"tanned campaigner from Badin, North _(‘arulina, captured the Canadian Upen Go‘f Chanpinship and the Seagram Gold Cup at Winnipeg when he put together a fantastic fourâ€"round total of 263, 25 shots under par and a new record score for the Open. JOHNNY PALMER, new Canadian Open golf champion, yrins broadly as he holds the Seagram Gold Cup for the first time after winning the 42nd Canadian Open at Winnipeg. > Ontario‘s Lakeland beaches are ideal sumâ€" mer playgrounds for famâ€" lly groups. The youngsters are safe near the shallow water and the whole family benefits from the Invigorating air and healthful summer sunshine. You‘ll enjoy going by bus, ASK YOUR LOCAL AGENT ABOUT "WIGHNWAY TOURS" TO ALL PARTS OF THE U.S.A. TICIEnER BuUs TerminiaL Stan Leonard of Vancouver was Tickets and Information at Friday, August 1, 1962 SPORTING, FISH & GAME NEWS GRAY COACH LINES NORTH BAY MIDLAND JACKSON‘S PT. In the grand finale to the actual game Mr. Howard Spies was winâ€" ner of a prize in the form of an order to return for a cleanâ€"up next day for which he was asâ€" sured the loan of a shovel. Irvin Snyder was pitcher and Abner Martin catcher for the Countrymen and Arthur Kirch and Jack MacDonald for the Towners. Donkey Ball Game Draws Llarge Crowd (Bv Chronicle Correspondent) CONESTOGO. â€" The village was â€" visited _ by _ over 1000 persons attending the Donkey vall game on the ball grounds Wednesday night of last week. The promoters of the game, The Bud Smith Enterprises of Rocky Ford, Colorado, had 11 mature and a baby donkey to assist in the event which proved one of the most enjoyable events ever staged here. Roaring laughter came from the throng during the ontire game with the antics of the donkeys as the producers. The first batters for ‘both the Towners and Countrymen fared well with successful home runs, while the other players experiâ€" vnced considerable difficulty with their mounts, who had to provide transportation for the teams from base to base throughout the game. Score at the end of the game was j runs for the Countrymen and 5 for the Towners. bigh Canadianâ€"â€"12th in the standâ€" ingsâ€"closely followed by Henry Martel of Edmonton. Jim Ferrier of Australia, winner for the last 2 years, wound up well down the list (Subject to Change) Round Trip 16.60 7.05 _ By examplé? There are, as any leader of people will tell you, many â€" hypocrites among . the "examplers". Often they are only smart enough not to parade their real underlying feelings and deâ€" sires until an unwatched moment. Fact is that, no matter what the measuring stick, it is not fair to the individual to dub him with the title "best anything". Not very many aduits can stand such praise. 1 have never seen the child whom it would not burt. I have seen a few exnnqt:u'l:s of "best campers" so acclaimed who turned out "real bad", and 1 have every reason to suspect that the award was the tuminl: point in their behaviour. A yet, we want boys and girls to improve, to make strides in some direcâ€" tions as a result of camp environâ€" ment. How then shall we meaâ€" sure what improvement has takâ€" en place. There is a way and I like it very much s We are not all born equal. Take a look around you if you doubt it. You may be more or leas physicâ€" ally perfect, but what about the lad who‘s both deaf and dumb. What about the child whose moâ€" ther was poorly and inadequately fed before he was bornh“wkmn father is so shiftiess that famâ€" é@ieé, in fact, I heartily disagree. Awards werc:h given to individual campers as the best campers in two camp sections. That‘s bad. Why? Here‘s why. First, by what measuring stick are you measuring the best campâ€" er? By popularity? That may require only a pleasant personaliâ€" ty. The pieasant and attractive personality people can rarely wear well on personality alone. . By prowess? Much of skill is inborn and natural for which, in early years, the possessor can take little or no credit. There should be more. crows and easier shooting at this time for the young crows have always been fairly easy to call within RECREATION NOTES "Give The Little Guy a Chance" Several of the local crow shoutâ€" ers want to know what they are doing wrong, that they can‘t get the black boys just so closeâ€"and no closer. In other words they can inters est the crows, but they can‘t get them to come within gun range. Frankly fellers, I don‘t know the answer. They did exactly the same thin% to me the last time I was out. They would answer the call and a few of them even came a short distance toward it, but they wouldn‘t come close enough to take a poke at them. Actually the last time we were out we did not see many crows. We hunted over territory where we had previously shot as high as twentyâ€"nine in an afternoon, and got two crows. One of these was an extremely long shot and there was probably as much good luck as good shooting involved. Soon Ott, complete with appeâ€" tite arrived on the scene. If the individual who had stolen the ‘unch had come into view at that time, probably Ott would have eaten him as well as the sandâ€" wiches. As it was, they existed un chocolate bars, cokes and four sandwiches Jack had packed. Needless to say there was a stop made at the first restaurant on the way home. Having fished with Ott on numerous occasions «nd knowing the extent of his apâ€". petite, we wonder how the fish ever got back to Waterloo, Hel just couldn‘t have had a match with him to lisht a fire. ] By DON McLAREN I agree that camp can be less bother when run on the old comâ€" ‘petitive style, but I know from en@ieme that they do not deâ€" ve as much or as worthy perâ€" sonality characteristics in chilâ€" d‘rm as cl!oo‘g_‘theA“‘gn-w competiâ€" reasoned that if he could walk on one leg he could run on one leg. That summer he learned to swim. He also learned how _ to broad jump. When closed Mike was given a myflud crest for his "improvement". No one ever told him, for I was the only one who knew, that he had made greater strides than anyâ€" one in campâ€"including me. The next time I saw Mike was when, as a one-olgged skater, he was making a g living as wel} as a name for himself. Mike is one of the reasons 1 like the "beat yourself", measuring stick and I still think that the compariâ€" sons with the achievementse of others can be and should be omitâ€" ted by leaders. are camps for? in c-n& one year. He was an orâ€" ‘phm, e victim of a car accident on the streets of Quebec City leaving him with one leg. Mike came to camp the first year I was trying out this selfâ€"competition theory. At first I wondered how he would compete even with himâ€" self in the 100â€"yardâ€"race, but Mike soon showed us how. He self today against the mark you made yesterday and using someâ€" one else in the same competitive event onl{u: a â€"maker. I don‘t w ij any of y8u ever heard of Mike Paris. I had him ily haven‘t enough to eat. Do you think that lad has a chance in a quarter mile swim against a norâ€" mal boy? So you give a cup for No, the old standards of "The devil take the hinder most" won‘t do ar'? more. The new standard is selfâ€"competition; pitting yourâ€" coming first to the normailly priâ€" vileged lad and you say "well tried" to the lesserâ€"privileged who may have tried twice as hard as his winning competitor. Maskinonge spawning oper‘.â€" tions this spring were carried sut in several new locations. No reâ€" cord fish were noted, but dozens of these great fighters ranging from 36 to 40 inches were consisâ€" tently netted and released. So . . . best of luck! On the other hand, the next world‘s record pickerel may be taken from the Winnipeg River. There, in 1950, Kenora hatchery men weighed in two huge wallâ€" eyes. One tipped the scales at seventeen pounds and the other was just a pound lighter. They were both returned to the water. It is well known, of course, that the Nipigon River breeds large speckled trout, in 1915, in fact, yielded the world‘s record for this species, a giant among trout weighing 14 lb. 8 oz. No such whopper has been hooked there since but good catches of "speckles" have been reported each year from the area, among which ten pounders have not been uncommon. And somewhere between the Muskoka Lakes and Georgian Bay there is a 23 lb. 9 oz. wallâ€" eye or yellow pickerel . . . at least, that was its weight in May, 1950, when it was taken during spawnâ€" }ing operations in Georgian Bay at the mouth of the Moon River. This monster fish measured 42 inches in length and had a girth of 27 inches. A female, the spawn takers striped it of eggs (probâ€" ably from 75 to 85 thousand) and released it unharmed in the waâ€" ters of the Moon; another world‘s record fish awaiting some lucky‘ angler. The previous and still ungiing record for pickerel was a 22 lb. 4 oz. lunker taken in 1943 from the Niagara River off Fort Erie. _ in October, 1951, a 9 lb. 2 oz. smallmouth bass was netted by natchery personnel operating in McCauley Lake. This exceeded the weight of the record bass takâ€" en in Pigeon Lake in 1930 which was 8 lbs. 4 oz. Only difference is . . . the bass netted by the Deâ€" puctment‘s men is probably still swimming around waiting for some fortunate angler to catch it and along with it, perhaps, a world‘s record. There are big fish still to be caught in Ontario, home of lakeâ€" lands and angling pleasure, acâ€" cording to Department of Lands and Forests fish management offiâ€" cers. That is, of course, if you‘re luekyt 0000000000 00 C Certain anglers are, apparently, using a rumor to the effect that the changes have already been made as a subterfuge, or misâ€" takenly as an excuse, for having undersized fish. Game fish are to be measured from the tip of the nose to the base of the tail at the fork. No other measurement wil} be accepted by conservation offiâ€" cers of the Department. _ â€" TORONTO.â€"Aithough considâ€" eration has been given by the Ontario government to the possiâ€" bility that chufes in the length measurement 0/ flme fish may be made at some future date, no amendments to existing regulaâ€" tions have been made. cers of the league censed over the way the Brake e is in process of issuing a writ of mandamus against the offiâ€" gun range. For some reason, this happy":tuafion does not seem to exist this year. If you find out whyâ€"let me know. Ernie Goman, president and business manager of the Watmflgltd-tmmthmgmmmw Bob Brake, hmlmn‘mhurhrmflymdnm fin levied against the n Club, was much too light. Goman May Take Baseball Issue Against London Ciub To Ontario Supreme Court TR3 WATHRLOO : {Onbasio) CHRONICLE: ath@ibey Gnyetracboied "‘x e kpmancua®{ (b) Oct. 15 to Nov. 25â€"South constitution "Ll ve Fepresenâ€" |of (a) and nortn of a line followâ€" tatives of the senior clubs in the ing the road from the Quebec league, ruled on the penalty to boundary â€" westerly along the Brake. . y south boundaries of Brethour and | Goman claims that the "penalâ€" Hilliard townships to Highway ty was never approved by the|No 11. northwesterly and northâ€" executive in accordance with the erly along Highway No. 11 to a constitution." int south of Englehart where it May lssue Writ [:o joined by the road to Westree, Â¥ | westerly along the aforesaid road Goman revealed that his "soliâ€" to the line of the CNR at Westree, citors have filed a letter with the ; southeasterivy along the CNR to league executive stati that if|its intersection with the west they don‘t intend to e?l?ome thelboundary of Beulah Township, constitution, we will issue a writ fsoutherly along the west boundaâ€" of Mandamus against the league." ries of Beulah, Marshay, Seotia, Claims Rules Vielated However, Goman claims that the Intercount htr violated its constitution -Ln ve represenâ€" tatives of the senior clubs in the league, ruled on the penalty to Brake. Goman claims that the "penalâ€" ty was never approved by the executive in accordance with the constitution." charged that Brake, a Detroiter, was a "commuter" and as such, he was playing for the Majors ilâ€" :'.SV {i, m- m u:udo:' lar King and Ottawa Sts. Selfâ€" Servâ€"Ice COMES TO WATERLOO RANGER is thus providing the residents of Waterloo and surrounding territory the same convenient method of purchasing a 50 Ib. block of ice or a bag of crushed ice as is now provided at our main plant, 520 King Street West, and at our East Kitchener branch station, King and Ottawa Streets. Remember Ranger Ice is Healthâ€"Saving, Foodâ€"Saving, Moneyâ€"Saving. In the kitchen, or at a party, or on a picnic or weekâ€"end jaunt, it should play an important part in your plan for better living. As a further step in a program of everâ€"increasing public service, and because of a continually growing demand for its products, RANGER ICE COMPANY takes pride in announcing the opening of a new driveâ€" in branch ice vending station in Waterloo at the northwest corner of King and Dearborn Streets, next to Carter Bros. welding establishment. Any hour of the day or night you may purchase block or crushed ice by simply depositing a coin in the slot. A Subsidiory of Ronger Brewing Company Limited RANGER (a) Oct 1 to Nov. 25â€"North of the northernmost eastâ€"west line of the Cu\;‘dim National Railâ€" way, from the Quebec boundary to the Manitobe boundary. extend from Nov. 24th to Decemâ€" ber 24th. The date is so timed that Inâ€" dians and trappers wil} be mble to freeze their meat when it is Here are the open season, t limits and license fees for 1952 TORONTO.â€"The moose season, elosed now for severa} seasons in an effort to allow an increase in innh.uzmtnmh, will be MOOSE SEASON OPEN IN 1952 FOR RESIDENT HUNTERS ONLY RANGER ICE COMPANY ICE COMPANY 520 King West Kitchener 3B and 4B to the northwest an‘ie of Township 4B, westerly to the southwest angle of Township 5F, northerly to the northwest angle the Little White River, Kindioâ€" gami River, Lake Kindiogami and the west boundaires of Townsh â€"i‘; 3B and 4B to the northwest anala Township, westerly to the northâ€" southerly to the southwest a of Township 120, westerly to Ue White River at the south boumh:{oo( Township 169, norâ€" therly along the east branch of (Continued on Page 6) 420, "THE BEST IN ICE" King and Dearborn Litt and Gehi for Sebringville allowed 8 hits and walked 9. Linwood ... 005 100 000â€"6 8 3 Sebringville 010 100 110â€"4 § 1 Thompson and Schnarr; Litt, Gehl and Schmidt. one LINWOOD. â€" Linwood Monday night defeated ville 6â€"4 in the 4th game of best of 7 semiâ€"final series. & locals now ;::d mi‘- 3 to 1. ame was played at Sebringvilie L:vuh big inning was in the &rd three walks and 4 hits _ _ Chat 'mon?‘on for Linwood a}â€" lowed only five hits and walked Linwood Trims > ‘ Sebringville 64 _ / (By secured five runs on PAGE THREE ;

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