Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 5 Jul 1961, p. 16

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} 16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, July 5, 1961 & SPORT OUTDOORS -- By Jack Sords KNEAD INTO ONE BALL « EN WHEN YOU GO FISHING, YOU PINCH OFF UTTLE BITS FOR BAIT FOR YOUR HOOK « , WHEN COOL, due LUMPS BUYING PROPERTY 'Burlington To Be Site : Major League Stadium? {HAMILTON (CP) -- A syndi- the city of Toronto," he said. cate of Canadian investors is|"It would provide a park for a idering building a major ball club which would belong to seball stadium in North Bur-{the large metropolitan area fington. known as the Golden Horse- w The investors, some of them |shoe." from Toronto, have already| The investors believe a ma- rted purchasing property ior league club in this area eir planned site. would draw fans from all of * Jack Kent Cooke, owner of Southern Ontario and the Buf- Horonto Maple Leafs of the In-|falo area. gernational League, said last] Burlington reports indicated a Week the syndicate is already at group of 66 property owners svork on the stadium plans. Mr. have been, or shortly will be, he has been seeking a ma-|approached in connection with r league baseball franchise for |the plan. geveral years. J. Gordon Blair, director of ++ "I am not directly concerned |business development at Bur- 2 acquiring the property but|lington, acknowledged Thursday e project has my complete|that some property owners are Blessing," said Mr. Cooke. already negotiating. He said he 11 "The only reason Toronto does|is not yet free to indicate the @ot have a major league ball exact area where the stadium ®lub is because it lacks a pro-|is planned, except to say that it Per stadium. would be readily accessible i; "The new plan, however, from the Queen Elizabeth Way 'would serve a larger area thanland Highway 5. TORONTO (CP) -- A record harvest of 12,058 moose was taken by some 36,000 hunters in Ontario in 1960. It was Cntario's biggest moose season ever, Lands an Forests Minister Spooner said in the department's news let- ter. There were more hunters, more moose killed and a higher percentage of hunter successes than in any previous year. The 1960 hunt is estimated to have brought close to $5,000,000 to the provincial economy, with each moose taken representing an expenditure of slightly more than $407. In spite of the record kill, Mr. Spooner said he felt that, with a provincial inventory of more than 125,000 moose, the year's harvest should have been tri pled if full advantage was to be taken of this natural resource. "If every hunter who bought a licence last year' had able to shoot a moose, instead of the usual one in three, he Moose Was Record Harvest for a hunter success of 28.4 per 'Crop' In 1960 [would be cropping our moose herd at just about the proper level," Mr. Spooner said. WILL AID HUNTERS "Our aim over the next few, years must be to get more roads| open to hunters and relax the restrictions on air travel . . . In this way, any congestion among hunters will be relieved and {moose herds will be provided for public use which now are living and dying with no benefit io anyone." Since the moose season was reopened in Ontario in 1951, the sale of licences has increased annually. There were 36,160 li- cences -sold in 1960 compared with 29,780 in 1959. | Calculations of the depart. ment's fish and wildlife branch indicate that 28,644 resident cent. per cent in Kenora district. IREMAINS STABLE In Southern Ontario 1,500 hunt 42 per cent in 1956. The biggest The largest number of resi- dent hunters was in Geraldton district where 3,087 hunters shot 1,136 moose. The highest resi- dent hunter success was the 60.5 share of the Southern Ontario moose hunt|q,..; oui title and Stuart Mac- fell to Parry Sound district Kenzie, also an Australian, won which catered to 60 per cent of the Diamond Sculls in the Eng- the hunters and supplied about|lish Henley. 56 per cent of the moose which were shot, An estimated 3,963 non-resi- dent hunters shot 2,617 moose for a hunter success of 66.1 per cent in 1960. In 1959, there were only 3,233 non-resident hunters to shoot 1,976 moose for a hun- ter success of 61.1 per cent. As usual, the non-resident suc- cess averaged more than twice that of resident hunters, the non-residents having 66.1 per cent success compared with 30.5 per cent for residents. REMEMBER WHEN. . .? ers shot 711 moose in 1950 com- By THE CANADIAN PRESS pared with 1,200 hunters who shot 565 moose in the last sea-| son in 1958. The reporter hunter success has remained at about 47 per cent for the last two sea-| sons after a reported success of Althea Gibson, the New York {Negro tennis star, won the Wim- bledon women's championship for the second time three years ago today, That was also the day that Ashley Cooper of Aus- MOSCA AND MEADOWS ARE STARTING FEUD EARLY? WINOOSKI PARK, Vt. (CP) Ed Meadows and Angelo Mosca are exchanging shots at long range with the open- ing of the Big Four football season still weeks away. It's strictly verbal so far. Meadows, 28, a defensive end with Montreal Alouettes, has a hard-nosed reputation after six years' experience in the National Football League. He was the man who broke the leg of Detroit's great passing quarterback, Bobby Layne, a couple of seasons back.. When Mosca, a mauling lineman with Ottawa Rough Riders, learned Montreal had signed Meadows, he re- marked: "I see the Alouettes have provided me with my dessert." Meadows, at Montreal's three - week training camp here, declined comment at first. But the dig apparently stung him. Later on he came back with: "You can tell that guy that if' 'he's coming after me he better bring his lunch because it's going to be an all-after- noon job." Meadows. at six-feet-two and 225 pounds, - gives away three inches in height and 40 pounds to Mosca. [tralia won the Wimbledon men's tennis crown, Peter Thompson of Australia won the British TRIES OUT BOAT SARNIA (CP) -- Miss Super- test III, with Bob Hayward at the controls, Monday was given her first water trials of the year in preparation for the defence lot the Harmsworth Trophy at Picton Aug. 5. Power unit for the boat was a Merlin engine transferred from Miss Supertest II after the recent Memorial 'Day race at Detroit. Top Relay Teams Meet On Friday TORONTO (CP)~Top Cana- dian and United States teams will compete in the Canadian re- lay championships Friday. Among 24 teams entered, com- prising 250 runners, will be the Cleveland Striders, New 'York Pioneer Club and the Chicago Track Club, East York Track Club probably ast York Track Clul will meet Tommy Sullivan, +4 middle-distance runner from Ca itornia who 'runs the mile in Among other challen names on the roster is University track captain Jim Stack, who defeated world, mile champion Herb Elliott in the half-mile event at the recent Oxford-Cambridge, Yale - Har vard competition. NAPOLEON'S HOME The island of Corsica, birth. place of Napoleon, lies in the Mediterranean off the west coast of Italy. hunters shot 8,730 . moose in Northern Ontario for a hunter, success of 30.5 per cent in 1960. In 1959 there were only 24,481 hunters who shot 6,949 moose 72 49 ROUND-TRIP TORONTO TO I) DOWN LONDON See Your Travel Agent or BRITISH OVERSEAS AIRWAYS CORPORATION Up to 24 months to pay the balance ... you fly the Atlantic Economy Class by Rolls-Royce 707 jet... B-0:A( . [WW J BUILDERS. 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