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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 3 Oct 1952, p. 3

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_ Faun; aurular charges are; " current " I Lockwood Stubbs, Alton; Dr. Jam torts to dumm1Thomas, Caledon physician Gor- 30 of the " doo J, Breden, a councxlior at charges nuns: Oranzevule and “Milan: Fergu- the ugh! men‘wn, former town councillor at charged withlorau1eeviue, Otto Caven, Alton, taking 127 lake funeral director, was charged trout by gill with gzvm false "damnation to n e tt In g, suc-,wtldute Jllfcdhr' ceeds, then the George Lave: ot Cooksvule, a Department ot deputy game warden, was charged lands and For- mm mung 127 lake trout by 3111 eats mar Just netung, having more than 10 take as well toreet trout in tus possesmon, using gill about having game overseer; and nets m Tums Lake u, Algonquin let the country go to the fish and Vark and breaking a beaver dam. game hogs John Kidd of 1ngletyood, a ty- [r) A new; article from Burks Falls refers to these men as "eight Sportsmen". The same article; said the courtroom was -redolent my.”qu 9 IT', 20" and 21" ’ TELEVISION ; MODELS at the Hacienda SPEAKER . MOVIES - Ete Refreshments after meeting. SPORTING, FISH & GAME NEWS Waterloo Rod & Gun Club SEE THEM ALL AT Waterloo Stove ' Appliances The Exciting New WATERL00 STOVE " King St. S. The not! meeting YOU GET : I’M” 17" TV COMBINATION will be held . IElEVISION . RAND . PHONOGRAPH for ONE PRICE ALL WITH BUILT-IN RADIO AT NO EXTRA COST! DROP " AND SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY OF of the Admiral TV SETS Admiirall THE ABOVE ILLUSTRATION IS A "Ihe World's Most Powedul Ielevision" FOR ADVICE ON TV OR RADIO, SEE 8: APPLIANCES ', l Char ed it: gil . F 121 a wi 1 net “the trout WIS Dr. 'ad,', Stubbs, Culedon veteran”. who qu use charged with brain; a beaver dam ma having more than ten lake trout n: his 'Mt- 'PAT' PATTON OUR TELEVISION EXPERT mm the odour ot and Ink". Mo George Liver of Commune, . deputy game warden, was charged with team; 122 lute trout try gill netung, hum; more than to lake trout m tus pomon, using gill nets in Tims Lake In Algonquin Park an_d_ “any; , bung dyn. John Kidd ot Inglewood. . 191'- mer magistrate, was charged with Lanna 121 lake trout with gill nets, having more than ten ia.ke trout m his tttttrt and usmz gill nets m im uke, _ _ _ The game warden who picked up this group Is certainly entitled to me respect and backing ot cv- err real sportsman In this coun- try, us well as encouragement from the utBcials of the epu'to ment of Lands and Forests. With public indignation roused " practically every ,'l'r"v""l,',',fied in the country, it is very unlikely mey will escape without some- thing being done to deter their aluminum in future. . . . - . Note that not only can you not shoot pheasants with a ritte dur- Those of you who plan on talk the open pheasant season . . . you mg m the pheasant and duck can't shoot “you. _ , . not even shooting this year may do well tola sparrow m the areas where remember that the use of "tles of pheaaant tilrooting is allowed . N0 EXTRA terr IV plus RADIO th-tri-Cir-alligator Has a Big Jd)-. htstitotitm Needs Your Moral Support l!-l!!s;o I ll!l by the Collegiate a; other ' what I huge that the Coll-:1 me have on their hands. V All I know about school-leech- mgnwhetlleernedwhenlsut» stunted tor three weeks at I country school in Seahtchunn. H_ad.torhaIeojtime.te?o.Nuttt ell the subject; by taking one e dey end putting the Senior Grades together “he clue end the Jumors in no r, Pound out that the union in the aeaior grades group were not mentally the moat learned Taught bake!- ball at recesses and developed . girls' team that properly trimmed the Swift Current whoa! team and made the country gels feel pretty good of their wheel. I think the kids had e good time too. Couldn't have kept up the pace and the system tor a whole school year. Any dumb duck should be able to be I splash-in- the-pan, but it takes deeper leu- any calibre IS banned. Not only Is there a ban avian using I ri- tte to hunt migratory birds or pheasants, but it is illegal to even any one during this period. Paragraph 2 of section 60 in the Game and Fisheries Act reads as follows: No persons, in those parts where pheasants may be leg-11y taken, killed or shot, can unt any protected or “ROW ani- mal or bird with a riBe or possess a ride for that purpose during the open season tor pheasants. _ _ n Itrats_.)ett,tttueatrete" Lmiwgztmww m" tn 'ltr'tS'l'tfeti",ttlui". An tliywterrdt'tf'itol"fgtligit giawtqtilerrsedwtqnisub- ,. t EDGE-Al!" If ',t,ytot"fpetuuefglr, menu-human m uymmMm’am-cd 'srostortimt-dliaar. ”It.“ trdet2it,'et,t,ttte,Q2t oPerhine_trmrpatarmyt's We! view. I'm inland-din macaw-Wm total. I“ Ibokoamyjobnotu aatam-entdimetitrbetaattsq director ot activities and {man "rtasotutwemaratilo.m.- tyo, how toilivc‘mgu happily. recreetioiiomauiaioai cu con- sgdmbls JULaocial heh! $991 tht Provincial Government. We at it on the hub at tho volume and scope of our work and on cultu- perviaory expenditure. the litter of which has been and! over the (not up “H_nppily") u 1tsitugt wettavenoatutitoourtiving,but rather mum. to new": and 1 me?“ whereby In my ruck a not _ 1 The next monthly meetin of the Waterloo Rod and Gun td?, (ii/ii! be held at the regular time iand place, but will be on the Brat (Monday of the month instead of )the second. This will be October i6th. Asa Danard, Chatsworth bio- (logist will be the guest speaker. 1Movies will be shown and after the business period and v',',te,t,i.ht ls over, coffee and doughnuts wil be available to members. Much the same sprint to the nae in regards to VII dtowl. You can no longernfot ducks on the water with a ri e nor t"iir'lfl al- owed to stir up a rut o ducks m the hope they may By your way. In other words it you want 10 keep out of trouble with the game wardens, you would be well advised to leave that no: " nome until after the bird seasons are over. 7 The same law tttlift again this year in regards t automatic Ind pump action shotguns. They must be plugged for not more -thnn three ell: . . ' two in the ma- gazine and one in the barrel. The act that you forgot to Whittle out a plug or neglected to pluce it in the mugazine ot your gun, will Just not do as an excuse. Your gun must be plugged and no ex- cues will be. mowed George Pagel, a Waterloo Rod and Gun Club deputy warden knocked off a hefore-the-aettsott duckhunter last week. Congratu- lations George, may your success continue. There is also the matter of car- rying a loaded gun in your car. Even though there is no the" in the barrel of your gun, it will be considered loaded if there are cartridges in the magazine. Bet- ter check any other game laws you are not familiar with More you go hunting. It could be cheaper. We have done it a tour“: of times and know Just how oolish you felt. The pup probably didn't know we apologized,Nut probab- ‘y did realize we felt pretty silly abyut the whyre thing, _ _ Last fall while gunning Wood-; cock with the boys from the De-l partment, we had a deuce of tr' job keeping track of our dogs. Cover was very thick and youl could almost walk on a good size Labrador without even seeing) him. After the first day, Judge} Costello decided he had done: enough dog "looking. Going back) to his car, he returned with two, new collars for his dogs. Fasten- ed to each collar was a good sized bell. From then on it was a cinch for him to follow his dogs but the) rest of us were just as badly off; as ever. 1 Ever roar your head on, blow your whistle, and threaten to murder your spaniel in cold blood, only to find he is standing right behind you all the time you wefe Taking all the noise? _ - With the partridge season open- Ing in many sections next Satur- day, it's a certainty that all the _eaves will not be down and ground cover will be heavy. We are working on a combined collar and bell for our own Labrador and believe you would find it a help too. You don't need to wor- ry about the bell scaring any birds away, in fact they seem to lie a little closer at times when the dog is belled. Maybe they think your hunting pal is a cow. This promises to be a good meeting, Better make sure you are there. You could even bring a friend . . . maybe he would like to be a member ot a good active conservation club. Rim Saturday" will be diner- ent, I may not get many duck: or partridge, but I'm sure going hun- tin'. Actually we would like to see these Fowl Shoots tulle the form of mo skillful shooting, but honest]? wouldn't know what to suggest, The shotgun shooting at n stationary target is plain ull luck with the greenest shooter on the field standing? the some chance as the more skil ed Possibly this is the reason such a good crowd turns out Your shooting . ' but it's still luck that decide: whot will happen after you pull the trigger Didn't do any ttshing or hunting this past weekend. My wife has been trying all summer to get me to put in a new lawn at the back of the house, so I ftmtlly broke down. After all it was too much to expect me to give up trout fish. "ttart to plant gray: _ -.-- The Fowl Shoot held b the Waterloo Rod and Gun Clug Int Saturday was a dehnite success and numerous prize winners walked awny with the turkeys Ind chickens offered. Ifie rifle shooting of couru was different. There might have been I very sm-Il element of luck in this type of shooting but not too much Either the shooter knew what he wu doing or he didn't have much of I dance, Got any wage-mien: on the shotgun imm- ingl an wanton.” can-Inc" MW 1'e 4.525!- ' the Fd3.c., u pre All _ Ileana To An and i As I see it the Collegiate curri- culum is but a means to an end,) the beginning of learning how to learn. The pupil must learn that it is necessary to work as well as "o learn how to work. Not all Emma who have the work habit‘ now how to rtce',"eu2,?'eee' The squirrel in the arrel cage, works hard but he gets nowhere. To have our junior adults learn how to work and study must be ai taxing task. Their leaders cer- tainly have their jobs cut out. There are a number ot such lead- :ers who are skilled enough, lucky ,enough and highly enough ex- urerienced to hit a high mark of proBciency. The rest of us, not always because of a lack of skill or the element of luck, get a fair average or slightly better. i Eager to succeed ' The teenagers are hard to lead llargely because, with the "world open before them, they are very'; eager to become top-rate people.} No adult can ever hope to con- ;vince a real live teen-ager that leadership requires. knowledge) wand experience obtained through bears and years of hard, hard} lwork. All of them feel that such) ‘a process only goes to prove that to-day's leaders are particularly‘ ‘dumb to have needed so many years of learning and such hard, ‘labor. They are convinced that.) Anowledge can be memorized and (that there are short cuts tor hard" :work it you use your head. That) is why they look so lazy to adults. They're merely waiting and hop- ing for an easier and smarter way , ',to gain what they feel is right- ‘fully theirs, a place in the sun. '; The Teen Age l, The collegiate age is the teen' ‘age. It must be an arduous and o ten a discouraging task for a' heather to earn the respect and' ”in latti- penchant .. Bet our ,th!h,tl' “I; (h- 'rqeyteiqaidrrttsptmamuaJotr at tigdeiGGakitieiai.-rt iii ti In our iott we should be gmpted our Provincm 'pghl't't; from tT'ltfolr,hu'l2'l, "so. 'IU' '51": " crud the beau-men! of their mo- I.lgtlt "h', ')t,prulflr/,i 1t,tieold rule. But ttG diriseiin ___ a; In" ot u. know the head, C. It. “In, and Pll mm W" mm now. tio- "tuisaythatttietakwttiehhe mg! his ml! mun "perform re- sume: knowledge and odor! tu- btyond the suspicion: of a lay- my Well, there will very oc- cordjn; to how napalm the pu- tll u to burning, on what pI-ne u been his home tmining, how much help to acquire right atti- tudes the puril receives from out- of-school re ationships, who are his school chums and I score of other inttuences: A leader can do only so much in the battle “tins! the subversive influences. Only time and leerninf in the harder school of adult ite can locom- pliah what the pus)" fall; to lean: In a high echoo or ttgitt Manly the Inilure as dis, estrous u in e Suchan or a Jack- wn. Often it leads to frustration. Too often en otherwise potential- ly useful citizen becomes I medi- ocre nondescript. And what m m: ot the than my must reach in that teach- ELMIRA ROAD LET OUR EXPERTS HELP YOU SAVE MONEY . . TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR [i333 Planning To Build A Home of Your Own ? CONSULTATION uh - AU can“ in H y pump 33:». than any 0min co-pentloh and not keeping oné Ere qtlert, on the, 3091-0“! But an yountvould-bc dud-m not '0me to Juanita: ‘lsck at an , tor' We" ' (1.12.16: G, I, ttot, 'o. fortstettirJtreeatutys.as 5t iCtoFttuei.rou.i. m" (mm... - ii ii Shin Edi it]?! com! £17.73 i serious enort to learn. Chadian teén- can; 1.5 ml Not My at M Bu! "at. you»; ,ouid:tre 9W! FOR THE WIDEST SELECTION AND THE BEST HUNTING EQUIPMENT AT THE LOWEST PRICES . . . SEE " Queen s. "Your Friends in the Lumber Business" MEL WEBER U-Lc amt; In" at“ to than and to than when lud- enlu'p may follow“. IR In" In“. t Why all this? than rally now gh"2S't pct m. beam guilmmum . u: the T,tec'.'ltt o a ' In you-ti poop ' their pane-Tu. C. . Mn. and tlt with l the rent an wishing ' and his gun the “but mu- m of mecca Another xenon is that l pan the K-VI "Pet outd Vocational School at t ax tunes I tt and my inclina- tion is just to ta c " and the work it do. for granted. l mom: it wu high time to anus}: my feel- Mga and to set them own on Pa- KITCHENEK SERVICE GIVI US A "WI!" AT 6-6771 llMITED Thed-tm-tttaaa-ar-" '2,ttd"g,uz,ht.',u'oa'u'.t scam-acumen“ you. wiurtoouMtaniu.mmt.ae meSound. More than I.“ no» as " General Motors of lell - mitted ideas to the Wrt',", award plan and“ l 1. GM accepted ‘70 of the suggestions and paid out $10.18 An award money. DUCK SEASON More tttyn _ My... pl OCIOBER 4 See the selection of BUT SHORT on sommmn GUNS SHELLS M U NTING COATS For Duck: or Deer PANTS BOOTS CARTRIDGE BELTS DUCK CALLS WATIILOO All Gauges New and Used. SPORTING GOODS Etc. 2At332

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