Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Oct 1967, p. 7

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ATE: 7 Installation R ae ~ OUTDOORS By Bill Owens Times Outdoor Writer HUNTERS AND fishermen quite often will misinterpret game and fish regulations and 'even though this may not lead to being apprehended, it nevertheless means that the law is being broken and sud- denly the game overseer is right there to make an arrest. Therefore, with thé moose season under way and with the deer season being some three weeks away, it may be well to clear up some of the misunderstandings which exist in regard to the game and fish laws. IT IS a well known fact that if six deer hunters go into a camp with six deer licences, any one of the hunters may shoot six deer. As long as the number of deer does not ex- ceed the total number of li- cences held by the party then no law is broken: However, it is commonly believed that if one hunter of the six in the party has a moose [icence, likewise any one of the six can shoot a moose. This is not a fact, for only the holder of the moose licence can legally shoot the moose. Similarly, the situation is the same in regard to moose licences. Holders of moose. licences may allow any one of the party to shoot all the moose for the party, but if only one has a deer licence then only the holder of the deer licence 'can shoot the deer, PHEASANT hunters also seen to be totally unaware of 'the number of birds they can fake with one or more regu- lated township licences. It is a well known fact that hunt- ers will buy two township li- cences for pheasant in order to cover a greater area and thus increase their chances of getting birds. They also be- lieve that when they have two licences, e.g. Darlington and Clarke in Durham County, that they are allowed a three dird limit for each township. 'This again is false, because tthe season is set-for a county or area and the bird limit per day is for the county or area and not by township. How- ever, there' is no possession limit on pheasant so that a hunter may take his three bird limit for as many days as he is lucky enough to get birds without getting into trouble. The same principle applies to the townships of Pickering, Whitby and East Whitby or any other number of townships in any county or area governed by one season. DUCK HUNTERS are an- other segment of the hunting populace who labor under false ideas. Hunters who feed duck ponds are breaking the law if they stop feeding their ponds one week before the opening of the season. Under the terms of the Migratory Birds Act, all feed must be cleaned up by the birds or the owners of the pond one week before the opening of the season, not that the feed- ing must stop one week be- fore. It has been known that the mounted police have laid charges against duck hunters shooting over a pond which shows evidence of sprouting grain which was spread out weeks before. This also con- stitutes a feed area and this type of evidence must also be cleaned up one week be- fore the opening of the sea- son. ANGLERS ALSO have a misunderstanding of daily fish limits but not on such a large scale as the hunter. Some anglers think it is against the law to have in possession more than a daily limit of one | type of game fish. The truth | of the matter is that' one | angler may take the daily limit of every game fish for which there is an open season and still be within the law. | HERE AND THERE: Hunt- ers who have hunted deer in Durham County may again expect the same season this year but the Lands and For- ests officials have not yet an- nounced the season and are thus controlling the hunting pressure. An open season for deer has been approved for Reach Township. Pickering, Scott and Uxbridge will also be open . . . The Oshawa and District Sportsmen's Associa- tion are to be commended for not approving a_ resolution from the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters, Zone 5, which called for a change in the issuing of the summer hunting licences, The resolu- tion called for a licence to cover a general area rather than one county as at present. The local club took the atti- tude that the present system of issuing licences was right because it keeps the hunters in the field to a minimum because they invariably buy a licence for one county only, This method keeps the coun- try safer for farmers, pic- nickers and others who take to the outdoors for work and recreation. Any change from the present method of issuing licences would be a retro- grade step and would add to an already bad hunter-land- owner relationship. Arnie Dropped From Play In Ryder Cup Golf Match HOUSTON (AP) -- Arnold Palmer was on the bench when U.S. golf professionals went out to try to widen their 514-24 lead over the British today in the second phase of the 17th bien- nial Ryder Cup matches. Palmer, one of the stars in America's strong start Friday in the two-ball foursomes, was surprisingly dropped from the lineup for the four morning four-ball tests although slated to return to action in the after- noon. The decision was made by U.S. captain, Ben Hogan, who didn't think it was necessary to give an explanation. "He is not playing because I say so,"' Hogan told a news con- ference. 'I am the captain and I say who plays." A reporter asked if there were reasons. "Yep," said Hogan. "May I ask what they are?" the reporter pressed. "You may ask, but I don't have to tell you," Hogan re- plied. In addition to Palmer, the world's all-time leading money Blue Blades, the Hawk, and the Wee Ice Mon. Hogan has become the mili- tant captain, pushing the Professional Golfers Association brass to the sidelines in the con- duct of the team. So far it's worked well. Palmer and Gardner Dickin- son won 'two matches Friday, beating O'Connor and Alliss 2 and 1 and then trouncing young Malcolm Gregson and Hugh Boyle 5 and 4. Palmer made a fantastic shot out of the woods for the key shot of the morning match. Fine putting by Dickin- son won the second. Pott and Nichols also won two} points, beating Hunt and Coles 6) and 5 and Alliss and O'Connor 2 and 1, The other U.S. full point came on a 1-up victory by Boros and Casper over Will and Hug- gett, who played the same pair to a standstill for a half in the morning. Jacklin and Thomas were Britain's heroes, winning twice. They beat Sanders and Brewer 4 and 3 and Littler and Geiber- ger 3 and 2. Jacklin is Britain's | national League, a class B | for the disappearance of doz- By JOHN SHORT Canadian Press Staff Writer The death of Toronto Maple Leafs, at 78 the oldest fran- chise in the International League, leaves Vancouver Mounties of the Pacific Coast League as the only Canadian survivor in organized base- ball. Few tears were shed over the demise. The Leafs, who had won 13 league champion- ships, drew only a few hun- dred fans a game on the aver- age this summer. In the last four years under community ownership, the team had lost an estimated $500,000. The end of professional baseball in Toronto means the league is no longer internation- al. But it wasn't always that way. In the years since it was founded in 1884 it has had teams in Montreal, Ottawa, Hamilton and London as well as Cuba. London was represented in three seasons, all before 1900, Hamilton operated in five sep- arate seasons, the last of which was 1918, Ottawa folded in 1954 and Montreal in 1960. Winnipeg Goldeyes of the Northern League, Hamilton Cardinals of the old Pony League and several franchises in the defunct Western Inter- circuit, also have died since 1950. Television is usually blamed ens of minor league fran- chises but there were other factors. In Toronto's case, fans had been led to believe they might get a major league team. When that prospect faded they lost interest in their minor league club. LEAGUE PACKED UP Winnipeg collapsed when the Northern League suspend- ed operations for a year. Vic- toria, Edmonton and Calgary dropped out of the old WIBL because expenses were too high, facilities inadequate and travel costs prohibitive. Van- couver also left the Western International but graduated in 1957 to the PCL. Ottawa left the Internation- al League after fans ignored a poor club that showed few signs of improving. The club was controlled by Philadelp- hia Athletics whose fiscal probl soon prompted transfer to Kansas City. Montreal's collapse was linked to the shift of the par- ent Brooklyn Dodgers. to Los Angeles. Such greats as Jackie Robinson, Don New- Lansdowne Park Full Of Hot Air OTTAWA (CP)--With Grey Cup day just six weeks away, general manager Red O'Quinn of the Ottawa Rough Riders Fri- day unveiled his plans to have the Lansdowne Park field in de- Few People Shed Tears Over Death Of Leafs THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, October 21, 1967 7 Yaz' Dream Comes True With $100,000 Contract BOSTON (AP)--Carl Yas-) Some of the things Yastrzem-| trzemski, baseball's newest so-\skt did included winning the Tri- Yawkey said, 'But Carl was the|year-old Yastrzemski the see- leader. He helped the youngerjond highest paid player in Red players and he inspired the en-|Sox history behind Ted Wil- |lire team." litms, who made an estimated | The contract makes the 28-'$125,000 in his heyday. combe, Johnny Podres and Doan Hoak had. entertained large crowds. But when the Dodgers moved to the Pacific Coast and made Spokane their top farm club, Montreal fans were dismayed by the ab- sence of the top-notchers they had learned to appreciate and stayed away in droves. Baseball thrived in Toronto in the 1950s under owner Jack Kent Cooke but it began to Slide after 1960 when he aban- doned efforts to talk civic offi- cials into constructing a sta- dium suitable for major league operations. MOVED TO LA Cooke, who now owns Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League, Los Angeles Lakers of the National Bas- ketball Association and has Shares in Washington Red- skins of the National Football League, was once convinced he could lure the majors to Toronto, In 1960, he decided the ask- ing price for players in the proposed expansion was too high. An American League ex- pansion team went to Los An- geles. Besides Cooke had no firm commitment that he would be awarded a franchise even if he could provide a suitable stadium. Only 81,000 fans visited de- crepit Maple Leaf Stadium this season to watch a fifth- place team. This compared with a on€-season high of near- ly 500,000 in 1952 for a fourth- place club. A bid by Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League to resurrect the base- ball club died shortly before president Bob Hunter notified league officials he would sell to American interests. A hockey club spokesman said the Toronto Harbor Com- mission refused to consider a lease of more than one year and placed a prohibitive price on purchase of the stadium. What about Canada's one baseball survivor? At last re- port, Vancouver Mounties were in no danger of folding, but their recent history in the PCL has been marked by fi- nancial brinkmanship. dream come true. The Red Sox, in keeping with) formal disclosure of the figure.} perstar, says his 1968 contract) ple Crown by leading the league for an estimated $100,000 is alin batting at .326 and runs bat- \ted in with 121 and tying Minne- "This is the kind of figure I|sota's Harmon Killebrew in ho- always dreamed about as a/mers with 44. He also played| boy," the slugging outfieider|spectacularly in left field all) who led Boston Red Sox to the season, making numerous bril- American League pennant saidjliant catches and throwing cun- at the signing ceremonies Fri-|ners out at the plate in several day. |key situations. tlub policy, did not make any | "off the field as well as on it." | re.| "Dick Williams, our manager,| But general manager Dick |does not believe in team cap-| O'Connell said the contract|tains, so he did not have one," "makes Carl one of the best| ~ --__--_---- | Little BULLY! But Yawkey said he méant/ paid players in Red Sox his-| tory." And most guesses were that his estimated $45,000 salary for 1967 was upped to the $100,- 000 bracket for the new one-| year pact, Owner Tom Yawkey was beaming with pleasure as he joked with Yastrzemski and talked to writers at the signing ceremonies. "There is.no measuring what) Carl meant to us and to New| England baseball this year,"| Yawkey said. . Carl did! jthings for us this year that| jother players could not do." l [ BILLIARDS | PICK-UP DELIVERED to you with dozens of "No Cost" Extras Cuts operating costs up to 50%. Rugged. Powerful. Handles @ 2,000 Ib. payload in it's big 6 ft. bed. 4-speed, full' synchro- mesh floor shift. Torsion-Bar Stabilizer, COME IN -- add a profitable smile to your life! TEST IT AT. YOUR SMILING DATSUN DEALER, ZOLTAN & NICK'S cia GARAGE 160 Simcoe St. $., Oshawa 728-0051 <= CE) J Magazines Tobacco MIKE'S PLACE 17 King West, Oshewe @ OPEN SUNDAYS @ SEEEEE50555E555555550 5555555555 5555555555 5555555555555 VIC TANNY"S THE cent shape for the pro football: final. O'Quinn said a new polyethyl- ene tarpaulin will cover the field by mid-November. Hot air will be blown under the tarp to keep: the field dry. The field, newly - built this, year, already has taken a terrif- ic beating from a number of centennial events and the fact that CFL and college games have been played on it in wet weather. As a result, the area between the 30-yard lines is badly chewed. The knockout punch could have been the Rider-B.C. Lions game here Wednesday played after a 48-hour down- pour. More cloudy weather is ex- jpected over the weekend. EXPLAINS PLANS O'Quinn, explaining his plans to keep the field dry and play- able for Dec. 2, said he hoped the tarp would be ready by Nov. 10. There seemed little chance the bare section at centre field would be resodded since its chances of taking hold at this time are slim. O'Quinn also announced plans to add at least 3,500 new seats winner, Hogan also ordered the 47-year-old Julius Boros to sit out the morning matches. The schedule was this: Bill Casper-Gay Brewer, U.S. vs. Peter Alliss-Christy O'Connor, Britain; Bobby Nichols-Johnny Pott, U.S. vs. Neil Coles-Ber- nard Hunt, Britain; Gene Littler-Al Geiberger, U.S. vs. ave Thomas-Tony Jacklin, ritain; Doug Sanders-Gardner Dickinson, U.S. vs. Brian Hug- gett-George Will, Britain. Four matches with revised lineups follow in the afternoon. The series, which the United States has lost only three times in 40 years, ends with 16 singles titls Sunday. Thers's no question who is boss of the American team. 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