Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Jul 1966, p. 10

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10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, July 7, 1966 Fishing Not Affected By Ontario Hot Spell The heat wave in Ontario dur-;lakes, lake trout fair at Lake; ing the last week didn't seem|Nipigon and Nipigon Bay. | to hurt the anglers' chances of) nH -- Northern pike) landing fish. _|eatches good along Grassy The lands and forests depart-|River system, with most! ment reports that pickerel andj anglers using artificial bait. | northern pike catches were} North Bay -- Pickerel fair,| mostly good to excellent, espe-|hass good on Mattawa River,| cially in northwestern Ontario. muskellunge fair in Lake Nos- Bass fishing remained good in|bonsing, lake 'trout poor and) most areas of eastern, western| Speckled trout fair in Mattawa and southern Ontario, but) area. : catches of lake trout fell off as| Parry Sound--Bass fair, al- the fish moved to deeper water.| though some good catches in in- Lake, northern pike and bass fair. Worms best bait. Swastika--Pickerel and north- ern pike limits easily obtained, speckled and lake trout fair to good. SOUTH Lake Simcoe--Bass excellent at Lake Scugog, bass and pick- erel fair to excellent at Sparrow Lake and fair at Cook Bay and Lake-Couchiching. --Lake--trout bak poor and speckled trout fair. Among the best catches re- ounces, landed during a Kins- men fish derby at Eagle Lake in the Kenora district. Reports from 21 of the depart- ment's 22 districts: », NORTH Chapleau--Northern pike ex cellent, pickerel good, lake trout fair. Cochrane-- ern pike excellent, trout poor in lakes but excellent in streams. Geraldton -- Pickerel and northern pike good on Burrows, | Wild Goose and O'Sullivan ported by the department was) a pickerel of 12 pounds, four| "and speckled trout poor in Sault area, muskellunge and pickerel Pickere] and north-| |in Montreal River. lets along Georgian Bay, Best) Kemptville --Perch excellent pickerel fishing is on Lake Nip-|in Lake St. Francis, pike good issing. 'in Gananoque Lake and Lake Pembroke--Lake trout good) St. Francis, bass good in Gan- at Opeongo, Booth and Shirley) anoque Lake and fair in bal- lakes. Bass, pickerel and north-' ance of district, pickerel good lern pike fair. | below power dam at Cornwall, | Port Arthur--All species fair/lake trout. catches declining. |to good. Lindsay--Lake trout good and Sault Ste. Marie--Lake trout) bass poor to fair in Gooderham area, perch good in Batcha-|good at Elephant Lake and |wana Bay, northern pike fair! Jack Lake, speckled trout good in Burnt River. Bass and lake trout good in Haliburton area, and speckled trout lat Gordon Lake, pickerel fair Sioux Lookout -- Muskel- pickerel |lunge, bass and pickerel fair,) poor. Bass and panfish good in orthern pike good. Sudbury -- Pickerel good Canada's Bisley Marksme Do Well, Despite Weather By CARL MOLLINS BROOKWOOD, England (CP) A Canadian Army marksman, prone in a pelting rainstorm on the sodden Bisley rifle range, turned to a range officer behin him. "T was just wondering what ft would take to have a shoot postponed here," the soldier said. "We only call off an event if) a range officer is struck by) lightning," the range officer | cracked back. ¢The soldier turned back to the dripping sights of his semiauto- matic FN rifle and squinted to- ward a barely-visible target 500 yards away. "T just squeezed the trigger and hoped," said Sgt. Roger McMahon, 36, of Cranbrook, B.C., a member of Lord Strath- cona's Horse and the 12-man Ca- nadian Army team at the 97th annual Bisley stioot. "We don't want to sound like fair - weather soldiers," said Capt. Jack Dangerfield, 28, of Vancouver, like McMahon a member of the Lord Strath- cona's Horse based at Iserlohn, West Germany. "But we don't usually shoot competitively in weather like this." Despite the handicap, Cana- dians scored impressively in major competitions Wednesday against 500 other marksmen, mainly British servicemen. LAND IN TOP 25 Canadians took six of the first 25 places -- including third, fourth and fifth--in the Queen Mary Challenge, a four - part contest over two days that in- cludes deliberate shooting, rapid firing, snap shooting and firing on the move at various ranges between 500 and 100 yards. In the service rifle champion- ship, based on an aggregate of scores in seven events, Cana- dians took six of the top 20 spots. But the Canadians failed to retain the top trophies won last year by Sgt. Joe Daigle, 35, of the Royal 22nd Regiment. Dai- gle was back to defend the Queen Mary and rifle cham- Sharp 'N Smart | Sets New Mark ST. CATHARINES (CP) --| Sharp 'N Smart, a two-year-old! chestnut pacer, set a Canadian mile. record for two-year-olds Wednesday night when he won| the sixth renewal of the $8,645) Champlain Futurity at Garden| City Raceway. ' The Meadow Al colt had no trouble with the rest of the field as he won by 18.lengths in 2:05 1-5 to pay $4.50. John Haynes, co-owner of the colt with Bob Shapiro of Mont- real, was at the reins as the speedy colt broke his own for- mer Canadian record for two- year-olds of 2:05 4-5. Lynden Dodger, owned by Max Webster of Brantford, was second and Action Jack, owned by Earle Thompson of St. Cath- arines, was a distant third. HAMBURG, N.Y. (CP) -- Wyandot Girl, owned by L. A.) Armstrong and W. C. Dick of Leamington, Ont., won the $1,200 feature at Buffalo Race-| way Wednesday night, pacing the mile in 2:09 2-5 on a muddy track. The longshot, Wyandot Girl returned $13.60 to win. Walter) Hope owned by the Byers, Drennan and Dufty Stable of| London, Ont., won the fifth race and Harwood Boy, owned by Sheridan Rivington of Lu- can, Ont., won a_ non-betting trot for two-year-olds. LONDON, Ont. (CP) .-- Levi McFadden of Dresden, Ont., drove three winners Wednesday night at Western Fair Race- way. McFadden took the second, fifth and eighth races on the 10-race card. In the second behind Camden Champ, he completed a $161.80 daily double combining with Gord' Girl in the first, «.. | Daigle said Wednesday. in| fish good, bass and muskellunge ----|fair in Kawartha Lakes where spinners. Pickerel, bass and panfish good in Rice Lake. Twe | Palmerston and Wensley lakes, | SPORTS OUTDOORS... By Bill Bero STREAMSIDE TIPS SOME OF YOUR FLIES MAY. | WHEN TROUT ARE IGNORING HA WER PLUGGING UP | YOUR FANCY FLY, CHEW IT THE EYE OF THE HOOK.USE IT JUST MAY HAVE A SAFETY PIN TO OPEN UP 'APPEAL TO THE ey ef Gi FORGET YOUR RAIN@= OR RAIN PARKA.IT JUST MIGHT RAIN WHILE YOU ARE IN ASTREAM AND THIS IS THE BEST TIME TO FISH FOR TROUT. WALK DOWN SLOWLY TO THE STREAM YOU WANT TO FISH. THEN TRY TO KEEP. WELL HIDDEN BEHIND BRUSH, TREES ORLARGE BOULDERS. DON'T EXPOSE YOURSELF TO THE FISH. fair in Burns, Buck and Lough-|Lake St. Clair, using worm has-| borough. Rainbow trout fair in}ness and minnows. Smallmouth northern part of district. Pick-|bass good at Lake St. Clair, | erel good in Bay of Quinte,/ Long Point Bay and in Colches- | Stoco, Moira, Bobs and Buck-|ter area. Muskellunge good at} shot lakes on worms and plugs.|Lake St. Clair. Panfish and} By BOB. TRIMBEE ST. CATHARINES (CP) -- Manfred Rudolph wants to join the "tesn-sas: corns"*. which 'in recent years has pushed Canada forward as a power to be reck- oned with in international swim- ming circles, The 10 - year - old youngster, who cracked three Canadian age-class records last weekend in a meet here and now owns a dozen under-10 marks, will try for 'No, 13 Saturday at Brant- ford, _ He'll also seek a few others in age-Class events 'at the Cana- |dian swimming championships July 12-16 at Hamilton. But what he wants most of all is to join such swimming stars as Elaine Tanner, 15, of Vancouver, and Marion Lay, 17, and Barb Hounsell, 15, a pair of Canadians who now live in Breaking Records Old Ha For Youthful Swimmer California, in the drive to bring Canada swimming honors. "I don't know if he'll do it," savs Adoloh Rudolph, his father and coach of St. Catharines Y with many swimmers is that by the time they reach their teens they lack determination rather than ability... ." OLYMPIC AIM HELPS "But if they can reach world class standards before 15 the prospects of an Olympics usu- ally is enough to keep them go- ing." | Adolph Rudoipi; a" top-fight) | swimmer in Germany before he left Bremen to come to Canada in, 1950, is the first to admit proficiency in any amateur| sport demands "almost a spar- tan existence."' | "You've got to be willing to| give it everything and that's| 725- Muskellunge fair in. Ottawa| perch good throughout district. | River. Lake Huron--Bass good in| WEST | Lake Huron along Bruce County Lake Erie--Pickerel good in| shoreline, pickerel fair in Ches-| St. Clair and Detroit nd| ley Lake, panfish fair to good. 725-6553 RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH $8.00 PER DAY RUTHERFORD'S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS } PLUS LOW MILEAGE CHARGE 6553 14 ALBERT ST, Oshawa why I haven't pushed Manfred. technique lessons, 10 butterfly He's got to want to do it." sprints in a 50-yard pool every The wiry five-foot youngster|two minutes. has worked out at least once] The ms --- oe the a day and som i three reco it week--29.3. i the last five rey I tc the 200-yard individual medley. schedule includes 50 lengths} He'll go after the butterfly freestyle--one every minute--imark for under-10 Saturday. [ I do all of my saving and borrowing at the CREDIT UNION Because I'm a credit union member, I'm also one of the owners, Best place I know of to save and borrow. For more information about... A Credit Union for Anyone Living or Working in Oshawa. Oshawa Central Study Group Credit Union Lid. 723-4945 OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE SUITE 2098 Minden area. Pickerel and pan- anglers using worms, plugs and ed--Lake trout good in| pionship, but slipped to 22nd in the Queen Mary and 14th in the service rifle championship. The St. Charles, N.B. native, jnow based at Werl, West Ger- | many, was the first Canadian }to win both trophies--a flat no- body has accomplished two years in succession. "It was too much to hope for a repeat," | The Canadians are satisfied that placing so many men so high in the premier events dis- plays more depth than in any previous Canadian team at Bis- ley. The army team includes seven Strathconas and one former member of the unit--Cpl. Brian Hill, 36, a brother of British racing driver Graham Hill, who emigrated to Canada 14 years ago and now is with the Fort Garry Horse at Calgary. WON TEAM HONORS The Strathconas qualified for Bisley by winning military team honors at the Canadian Rifle championships last August on Connaught Ranges, Ottawa. The team is rounded out by individual stars of the Con- naught trials--Cpl. Charles Mc- Bride, 36, of the Service Corps, Calgary; Cpl. Bob Standen, 27, of the Queen's. Own Rifles of Canada, Calgary, and Daigle and Cpl. Robert Labrecque, 29, of Montreal, both Van Doos based in West Germany. Sgt. Bill Holmes, a platoon weapons instructor at the Royal Marines infantry training cen- tre in Devon, won the Queen Mary trophy with an aggregate of 359 out of a possible 400. His score was a single point better than British Army cham- pion Cpl. Victor Brooks of the 3rd Royal Green-Jackets. Three Strathconas followed two Britons in the Queen Mary. Capt. Jack Dangerfield of Van- couver was third with 342 out of a possible 400; Craftsman Peter Eichelbaum, 27, of Bow Island, Alta., was fourth with 338 'and L.Cpl. John Castleman, 23, of Montreal was fifth with 337. Daigle's Queen Mary score of 319--down from his winning 362 last year--got 22nd place. Win- ning score this year was 359. TOPS 393 TALLY Daigle's record 393 tally in the 1965 service rifle champion- ship was eclipsed by a winning 400 out of a possible 455 scored this year by CPO Riley Curtis of the Royal Navy. Castleman was top Canadian in the event with 387 for sixth place, Daigle was next with 380 for 14th. Eichelbaum placed 16th with 377, Capt. Dangerfield 18th with 375 and Labrecque 19th, also with 375 '"'counted out.' Britain's Green Jackets won the Canadian shield with a rec- ord score of 681 out of a possible 800, 13 better tian the previous best set by the Royal Navy in 1964. The Lord Strathcona's had 655, three better than last year's winning total by the Royal Navy command. | The Royal. Navy Air Com- mand won the Robert's Cup snap shooting team match with | an aggregate of 134. Raf trans- port Command was second with | 117 and the Portsmouth Marines | third with 114. Tite Lord Strath- cona's were fourth with 113. Cpl. R. N. Van Gelderen, | RAF rifle champion, won a tie-| shoot against British Color Sgt | a 1.7 | 0 0 R. W.-Foss and Cpl. R. J Standen of Calgary for top prize in the secretary of state rapid firing competition. drive a new Chevrol ERNIE CAY for WALLBOARD and PLYWOODS Go ahead, prove it! Tell your Chevrolet dealer you want to test bounce on the foam-cushioned seats, stretch out, wiggle your toes. in the carpeting. Now, start up and move out. Try inat rough stretch of road. 20 304050600890 0 \\) ANNNNSSAVUEL SF ssh et. Before you get going, look it over, Chevrolet does ride Jet-smoother. Take THE HON EF: WET HISTOR CHE | on Ca oo C willl wl it onto the highway. Feel the surge of Chevrolet power (155 hp with standard Six and 195 hp with standard V8 model). Take her round a sharp curve. Chevrolet sits firm and steady. 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