rrwere FATALITIES HE. OSHAWA TIMES. Tuesday, December 28, 1965 1] 3 AAWY Asan 66 = some = ' = -- é rae et ee ara == = 2 2a as : nN nN con ITR S atalen Canadian Hunters improving ,..0)? COUNTRY SOccen | day's soccer results: | Brighton 2 Watford 0 Bristol R 0 Bournemouth 0 ENGLAND LEAGUE _| iexeter 1 Swansea 1 anks 10 parery Frograms Divison 1 Giushe 3 getnded 3 -- Aston Villa 0 West Ham 0 Hull City 1 Millwall 0 i s,, Oxford 7 Walsall 1 By JOHN LeBLANC |killed Nov. 19 when five bul-;haps by 35 per cent from 1964,/also had no season on moose, ane sips Seams: Reading 2 Peterborough 1 Canadian Press Staff Writer |lets were fired at a patrolling) according to a provincial gam hich have been afflicted by an} 7 iver } Shrews Canadian hunters 'had a bet:|snow vthicle which apparently|department spokesman. This|epidemic of "moose sickness." Le fiagd perth yyy Se yee 1 | York cr se ter - than --usual chance of not}was mistaken for a moose 180|/was partly due to mild weather; In Nova Scotia, too, some con- Northampton 2 Chelsea 3 Queens Pr vs. Oldham ppd. ending up as game in 1965. miles north of Prince Albert. |that kept them in heavily-|servation measures were taken) Notts F 1 Everton 0 Mansfield vs. Gillingham ppd. Though there were apparently] jn New Brunswick, a Fred-\Wooded areas, making them/by non - government groups.) Sheffield W 4 Arsenal 0 Southend U vs. Brentford ppd. more guns in the woods than/ericton husband and wife were|"@td to track. However, the; Dicks Unlimited made its first) stoke 3 Burnley 1 : } Division IV ever--well over 1,500,000--the| killed by a single shotgun blast|5¢me weather helped the moose |entry into the province with the! Tottenham 1 Sheffield U 0 Barnsley 1 Halifax 2 fatality record was one of the) aiong the St, John River. The|#unt, keeping them in acces-|pianned establishment of water| plackburn vs. Blackpool ppd. | Barrow 2 Doncaster 1 lowest in recent years. |person who fired the shot was|Sible potholes. {control dams 'at Missiquash| frylham vs. Leicester ppd. Chesterfield 0 Bradford 3 As the year drew to a closé,|not found. Saskatchewan reported good|marsh near the New Brunswick) Newcastle vs. Sunderland ppd. | Colchester 1 Chester 1 a Cross-Canada Survey by The) waue full statistics were notideer and moose hunting, but|>order to improve nesting Division 1 Hartlepools 1 Darlington 1 Canadian Press indicated a to-|_. 7. \ }grounds for ducks and geese. tal of 53 hunters accidentally|2Vailable on either the game|there was a closed season On| The control structures Et to| Cardiff 3 Southampton 5 Rochdale 6 Wrexham 0 : i a gs he numbers of li- hic! | ' ree Carlisl | Southport 3 Luton 2 shot:to death. This was eight} aoe, Ott : . antelope, which may be re- be built this winter. carlisle 4 Bury 1 r : ( cences issued, available f : i gas ' , Torquay 5 Aldershot 1 lower than 1964 and equal to| indicate eves e good 'year opened in 1966. Upland game| The King's County Fish and|Charlton 2 Portsmouth 2 Trenmere 0 Notts C 3 1963, which was the best since |"! b |birds were spotty in some areas|Game Association established aj Ctystal P 3 Ipswich 1 1959. The known high mark was one though with some Soft) nut plentiful in et with de-|Wild waterfowl sanctuary near Middlesbrough 2 Leyton Or 1 ginny Tact oe 94 in 1960. ee aS (creases showing in sharptailed|Kentville, The Colchester asso-| Norwich C 1 Coventry 1 Crewe Alex vs. Newport ppd. Continuing safety programs : -- had a good year for| crouse and Hungarian part-|ciation urged tougher laws Wolverhampton 1 Bristol C 1 running in all provinces were |deer but moose-hunting condi-|ridge, Because of heavy losses |against deer-jacking. | Bolton vs. Preston ppd. ie IRISH LEAGUE credited with much of the im-|!ons were poor becauseitast winter, there was no pleas-| A spokesman for the lands | Hudd'sfield vs. B'mingham ppd.| Bangor 1 Distillery 3 provement. There was no ma-|Swamps did not freeze over. | ant season, though officials hope|and forests department in Nova; ecinermem vs. Men Ch ee eee jor new legislation in the year,|@nd the bag of ducks dropped), heavy restocking program |Scotia said there is some offi-| NS eh For All ; but activities in the training and|because early bad _ weather) wij) make a 1966 open season Cial concern over illegal hunt- e a 7 education of hunters were aaa seb _-- goons a atas chan: | Possible. ing and a feeling that many sec- There Are Special Benefits erally intensified. l; € season was SNap-| Ontario and Quebec reported| {ions of the province's hunting | eee peo Be up. le generally bint year, thous legislation need updating. Revi- BUSINESS EXECUTIVES jup its third straight year with-| wEATHER HITS HUNT [geese fell off in Quebec be-| Sins are expected to be intro- AND SALESMEN jout a fatality. Manitoba had) : lcause of a late spring. Quebec| duced at the next session of, the just a single one, also for the| Alberta had a generally poor eH | legislature . For pervoncl use or for @ ACADIAN Models Std ime ia a row. Decreases|Yeat, particularly for upland|"unters reported the deer kill) "" "| Company use there s @ PONTIAC On peak registered by Quebec On-| birds, which were scarce be-|Tose to 11,406 from 10,816 the eee ne | definite advantages when Other Levin' Gaukatchewad. and British | Cause last winter's extreme cold|Year before. No figures were; HE GETS MORE? you lease a new... @ BUICK Request Bonmbia, - *"{killed off many birds and a wet |4Vailable for Ontario on deer,) NEW YORK (AP)--The foot: | No Insurance costs. .'. No maintenance costs... One rate covers FUMIE. | rearing season cut down broods, | but officials said the kill seemed | pall contract of New York Jets' | everything en one. or two yeer leese items .. . Phone or come ia FOUR ARE HIGHER |Poor tracking conditions made |at least as good as a year ago. rookie quarterback Joe Namath | re her ees THE Higher death figures were it a mediocre big-game season.| No major ups or downs were calls for $427,000 spread over) baa in Newfoundland, Nova|Duck-hunting was up but did not reported in the Atlantic Proy-| several years, not the $400,000 MILLS AUTO LEASE \Scotia, New Brunswick and Al-|reach the level of the 1950s. inces except that Nova Scotia| generally publicized, Columnist PHONE 723-4634 LTD. 266 KING ST, WEST |berta. | British Columbia's deer kill has a decline in duck population|Dick Young says in The Daily The totals by provinces with|Was down "'significantly," per-'--for reasons unknown-- and! News. 55 1964 figures in brackets: HIGH IDEAS -- Albert cycle team in the recent Games in Mexico. He says Newfoundiand, 2 (1); Nova Gachon of Montreal (wear- Tour of Mexico. Gachon, foreign athletes will also (Scotia, 6 (1): Prince Edward ing. white stetson) hitches a coach of the team, says need special food and (Island 9 (0); New Brunswick, wy ride on a motorcycle to more than altitude will be a bottled water. |5 (3): Quebec, 16 (19); Ontario, eatch up with the Canadian factor in the 1968 Olympic (CP Photo) {9 (14); Manitoba, 1 (1); Sas- ( ] katchewan, 3 (9); Alberta, 5 (3); British Columbia, 6 (10). AT OLYMPICS IN MEXICO The Alberta figures are unof- ficial, since authorities do not Tremendous Selection of over 3000 e | keep records. | Perhaps the most impressiv : Altitude " Food Water | ngure twa at of Ontario, Suits & Overcoats...the latest styles which in five years has cut its facilities from 36 to one-fourth ° that number despite the fact an| at ONE unbeatable price! Problems For Doctors sins"" A. B. Young, supervisor of By AL McNEIL jevents so they can become ac-jathletic team can come under hunter safety training for On-| lcustomed to the altitude. But he/the supervision of a Canadian/tario, credited the provincial MONTREAL (CP) -- Doctors.|discounts the theory that alti- doctor." government's hunter safety dietitians and the altitude willltyde alone is the major cause; But at other times it would|training program, which has all have something to do with/of disappointing performances|be necessary to make some ad-|3,000 instructors who volunteer who wins gold medals at the'py visitors. : lvance preparations. jto teach survival rules to mem-} 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico! "The Belgian cycling team had| "If we want to compete in|bers of fish and game clubs. City, says Albert Gachon. a physician travelling with the/distance events down there,| Saskatchewan's low figure} Gachon recently guided four|riders to check the "'altitude|we'll need to take along a-closed|also coincided with stepped-up} Canadian cyclists through the effect" but he found little or no|vehicle--completely outfitted --|safety training, with 1,956 in- gtuelling 19-day, 1,900-mile' an-|change in performance at great|so we can prepare our own type|structors participating in a pro- nual Tour of Mexico. |heights, Gachon says. lof meals. And we must supply|gram in which about 10,000) The 45-year-old illustrator for) Adjustment to food and water/our men with purified water." |young people have completed) the CBC, a former bike racerlis just as difficult as adjusting) 'The coach says the import-|Courses. The province also or- in Canada, returned with some|to the height, Gachon adds. jance of a physician travelling | dered os es of Be gebes, ideas on how to improve the ef-| . lwith the athletes was pointed|Cemt blaze orange ca 4 ficiency of athletes competing in/EASIER AT OLYMPICS lup the first day of the Fone of| hunting clothes. the rarefied atmosphere of a| '"'At the Olympics they won't|Meyico. Montreal's Marcel Roy| As usual, the year had its city nearly 114 miles above sea\have the trouble we had, where|was stricken with an intestinal|quota of inexplicable accidents, | level. |we were forced to eat at differ-|qisorder and was lost for most|and the most startling of these| He concedes it's important for|ent places each day. There they! of the race. This put extra pres-|happened to hit in Saskatche- | foreign athletes to arrive atjcan supervise what the athletes|.ure on Gary DeJong of Cal-;wan. Alfred Newland, a provin- | least a week in advance of theirleat and drink and any type Of|,ary and Dominico Muro and{clal conservation officer, was |Pierre Dandre of Montreal,)} oe other members of the team | CANADA OUTDOORS | Nevertheless, the HescoertS, Remember When? eee] land French teams were the only| By THE CANADIAN PRESS | | a |two foreign entries to complete} World heavyweight box- | Count S Bi orn ee the tour as a unit, The Cana-| ing champion Max Baer | dians finished 13th and the| {knocked out King Levinsky ; French 12th, and Canadian) 931 years ago ton ght--in 1934 cyclists have been invited to} _jin the second round at In Danger Extermination '«:"'* 9" | ala om i ot ttre ert ee at time Levinsky had been KIMBERLEY, B.C. (CP)--j;good by immediately spending) MANY WITHDREW | Tl a Te title to psa Like every human being, a wild|$20,000 acquiring key lands for) Gachon says many of} nddook 4 35 animal carries in~its--system|these.valuable sheep than by| Europe's top cyclists succumbed Mok Braddo inl sd 1935. | Superb all wool SUITS oe OPCOATS 'endemic disorders -- germs itjmaking this detailed ~ study;/to-stomach disorders and injur-| can tolerate when it is well-fed/likely at a cost of twice that,/ies and were forced to with-| : 4 ; and otherwise healthy. . jbut that's how we must oper-\draw. And only half the 24] ---OVERCOATS..: each reduced to a e ate today." Mexican teams finished, the} Just as a human can get alate : Mexic f ; | Sheep affected by the malady) Mexicans winning the individua!} mere $50... visit the biggest January cold when run down, a wild ani- e mal can give in to these germs, (are in four general herds thatjand team honors. ; Colema Here in the East Kootenay,|t0tal 1,000 animals or less, oc-|- "We started' out with a handi-| - LET PS A t big horn sheep cupying an area immediately|cap because of the mountainous | ° A ; F ode aires betes are under|east of Kimberley. A further|terrain and we began with a PICNIC Sale in Jack Fraser's 39 year history! attack by pastuerella, a viru-/Population of between 1,500 to|fear of the mountains because JUG lent bug threatening to wipe 4,900 between Radium, B.C.,/of the stories we had heard Model 5511 them out. and the U.S. border also is about altitude interfering with| Rog. Price $7.98 The disease is a combination|>°Ing threatened, the performance of athletes with the purchase of a of lungworm and heavy virus) Non - resident hunters who} 'However, about 10,000 feet} ij Suits regularly sell up to 69.95... A ; *inormally spend at least $100,-|was the highest stage we hit, | A Pe te Pris aga i 000 a year in this area haye no|and by that time the riders were| a Sorted. heir papiectchd . winter|sueeP season this year. They're| accustomed to the altitude and wae danke lend is being used by being urged to join a newly-| didn't need the oxygen we had 1 domestic cattle and other wild-|{oTmed B.C. Big Horn Sheep/transported all the way from aii i omes' Society, which has pledged to/Montreal." ' ' life. i | work with the B.C. Wildlife Fed-| Gachon emphasizes that his F Instead of grazing downhill eration for long-term manage-|comments on medical care and through ever more lush grass,/ment programs safeguarding|diet are not intended as criti they are greeted by stubbed-off|the future of the shee} i { = : | roots or bare earth, Several|---- meee ESS complete size-range in all fittings hundred may be dead already. | } une drimnng 1 protect : Choose from all wool suits and FRASERDALE OVERCOATS are Kiernan, promising to protect a nucleus of breeding stock, has 1 ih coats in sizes 36 to 46, including tremendously warm all wool etal tl econ roa gag -- eT regular, short, and tall models velour, yet are not too heavy. Game managers say control : -- we can definitely fit you! Styles include the trimmer over~ key lands is what they Ld HP ectarfinid'( lank «1 ais need, but they must document & ecial H ined ig Pp ours SUITS include regular and soya aaa, a a] TREATMENT HAMPERED of Sale man hitingbones, wihl . declaw, plain charcoal grey. Only Biologists say it is impracti | 6 muted overchecks. Two-piece TOPCOATS include dressy wor ote ba gt omg ge electric Young Men's models in elegant steds In herringbones or nail- one host of the disease, the STONELINED suits regularly sell up $50 heads . . . and the "tweedy"' snail that ye one stage of THURSDAY DEC. 30TH Weoter Heater fo 69.95 <i ORM 8.55 saxony look with half 550 oe aie ige : 'ak ten Pre ae : GREATEST SCIENTIFIC ADVANCE In raglan shoulder Only stricted, but sti o vast for OPEN TILL 9 P.M. the history of water heaters. Cole- oe thorough chemical dosing man's revolutionary Vit-Rock Water Says one expert: FRIDAY DEC. 31ST Heater -- with Its stonelined tank -- We likey would do more!) absolutely will not corrode or rust. < a | ALL STORES OPEN We 15 year Guarantees. FROM 10 AM.TO 6 PM. % Fully Automatic . . . 100% Why not tery TWO TEMS and save up to $49.90? safety controlled, YOUR SATISFACTION: ALL STORES WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY & Canada's ONLY BONDED wy IS OUR AIM JANUARY 1ST Water Heater, TW f * hein JACKt)FRASER Our GUARANTER OPEN REGULAR HOURS JAN, 3RD or s Kelly Disney Col man (two suits, or two coats, or a.suit/coat set --take your pickd Used Cars Sa HY ; , Ltd. 1200 Dundes € nO Brewers Retail | A. €. STARK Whitby 668-5891 BUDGET TERMS -- PLUMBING & HEATING DROP IN COURTICE, ONT, "Sver-3000 suits and overcoots! . .. the biggest January Sale in Jack Fraser's 39 year history... . 20'stores to serve you. 725-4377 ' Hid coats to $65. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE