OUTDOORS Hunting Season Opens On Migratory Ducks By BILL OWENS Times Outdoor Writer blush of dawn was touching the treetops We UEEVer puuu Wien wc sctss ssoo= Se k over the pond. They swooped low over the water as they swung toward the flock of decoys' bob- much 'too far away for the gunn a pot shot "just in case". One of the hunters in the blind cried out in pain and anger as shot sprayed over him. THIS IS only one case of stupid hunter action which took part last weekend when the duck season opened in the Central Region of the province: Many other hunters have reported incidents which do nothing to make duck hunting the sport is should be. There is the case of the heigh and distance away, There is the incident of rogues who "steal" another man's blind rather than build their own. One could relate many other aspects of the recent Opening day but suffice it to say that there has been no improvement in this regard from other years. Despite these conditions many local hunters did enjoy the duck shoot with varying degrees of success. As re- ports came in from various parts of the open area it is readily seen that there are ducks to shoot at. ON THE scene of stubble fields around Oshawa local hunters had spotty success. Marchant took one bird east of town, while Pete Davidson of Ajax gunned down three. Allen Wood shooting in the approximate area scored also took their limit of five shooting a pond just outside of also took their limit of five shooting a pond just outside of town. Fred Fudge was the only shooter reporting his take of three birds from Darlington Park. Going farther north a party consisting of Stan Heckett, Jim Bailey, Bruce and Owen Luke scored five ducks among the lot shooting at Lake St. John near Orillia. Al- lan Lamb only managed one bird at Cameron Lake, while Guy Chamberlain came home with an empty bag from Pigeon Lake. Ed Powell shooting with a friend on Crowe Lake marshes also was birdless. Otto Schwartz who was gunning the Trent River, scor- ed three while Amey Dennis of Newtonville took to the rivers and creeks around the Ganaraska watershed after @ poor morning in the stubble fields. His bag of four woodducks and a teal shows that ducks are where you find them. IN THE MID-EASTERN section of the province the ing was a lot better. Here again it was proven that beaver ponds produce more puddle ducks than do. the open waters of marsh fringed lakes, Frank Attard and his brother Harry shooting in an area north of Madoc took limit bags of five birds each. Your writer shooting in the same area also bagged a limit of five birds as did David and Robert Owens. Paul Chopik shooting in a pond near Tweed was another hunter to take his limit of five ducks. Gord Johansen was scoreless shooting at Janetville while C. Puglisevich shot two teal at Black- water. Ron Turpin and John Metzel shooting out Log Cabin Point at East Lake were among the hunters who filled their legal limit of five ducks. Rolly Chambers shot a teal and three woodducks near Bobcaygeon. In the teen-age set Gary Brabin and Larry Lupel shooting with John Coleman scored a teal apiece whiie te ee ee ee ee There is reason to believe that the local hunter itt nee wae. OO Stee ee Se eS ert two three weeks, providing the shooting areas are not ever drives ducks away faster than shooting at when they want to come into the beaver ponds for EE oo hgpe ae ee modera good shooting during the daylight leaves evening to incoming ducks. was being written an Oshawa house- shot some ducks called to ask what to make them a feast for the table. many ways to prepare a duck here is bit different which was passed on to submitted for your experience. without any stuffing but using salt r chunks over the breast and cook en. When the bird is done remove the carcass and cover with dripping Toasting pan. To make the sauce for your duck onion chopped fine in two tablespoons of salad onions are brown. Add one teaspoon of chopped one garlic clove crimbled in a mortar with ground black pepper, add one and a half table- of flour and cook for two minutes. Add three quar- ters of a cup of port wine and cook until thick. Add one of stock to this mixture or one cup of tomatoes or ato juice, add enough salt to suit your taste, add a pinch of thyme and service poured over the ducks chunks ... truly a dish for the most discriminating of gourmets. HERE AND THERE . . . get your free copy of "Ducks at a ong Asa the Canadian Wildlife Service, Ot- tawa. s let shows color plates of all common ducks with the geese in black and white. It also gives the main characteristics of the species and should prove valuable to all waterfowl hunters ... . Send in any..leg. bands your ducks may carry to the Canadian Wildlife Service stating date and locality that duck was shot and you will receive a full report on the bird from this agency . . . shotgun pellets eaten by waterfown will kill them . . . first reports on ruffed grouse in the general district which is now open indicated poor bird popula- tions . . . sun and stars seem to play a big part in the flights of migrating birds . . . Ruffed grouse season starts in Durham County on October Ist and closes on December 15 with bag limit five birds... Rice Lake netting survey shows pickerel in leading abundance follow- ed by largemouth bass, Smallmouth bass is next in line with the musky being a very, very poor entrant into the trap nets . . . United Action of Clear Water Conference to be held on October 8th, 9 a.m. at the U.A.W.A. Hall on Bond Street . . . Lake trout are biting good at Lake Kennissis. Sam Carr of Enfield took some dandies there last week-end. BE7E are i ; : f 4 3 ee z* il E tapas fres! SIT AND WAIT -- That's all Pittsburgh Pirates' man- ager Harry Walker could do Friday as rain prevented his team from facing San Francisco Giants. Los An- geles Dodgrs, meanwhile, By RON RAPOPORT Associated Press Sports Writer Manager Harry Walker and his Pittsburgh Pirates must play a doubleheader with San Francisco Giants today after the game was rained out Fri- lay. There is an 80 per cent chance of rain. "You're always better off playing when you're sched- uled,"' he said. '"You don't want a doubleheader if you can avoid them. That's two times you have to gear yourself up. It throws the pressure on you." The Pirates have to win three games from the Giants and hope like mad that Philadelphia Phillies knock off Los Angeles Dodgers a couple of times. era per 5-3 Friday, leaving the Dodgers' magie number at two Goalies By THE CANADIAN PRESS Emile Francis, whose 14 years as a professional goal- tender must have taught him the disadvantages of going into a game cold, has come up with hockey's answer to baseball's bullpen. Baseball pitchers warm up in the bullpen before relieving a pitcher and Francis, manager- coach of the National Hockey League's New York Rangers, decided an alternate goaltender deserved the same chance. So he has begun to alternate his goaltenders every five minutes. BLANK BOSTON 3-0 Francis's alternates Gilles Villemure and Cesare Maniago |--handled 28 shots Friday night and showed the advantage of staying loose by leading the Rangers. to..2..3-0..shutout.over Boston at the Bruins' training camp in London, Ont. Defenceman Harry Howell and forwards Paul Andrea and Earl Ingarfield scored the Rangers' goals. In the only other exhibition game Friday night, Toronto could manage only a 4-4 tie against their American Hockey League farm club, Rochester Americans, Jim Pappin scored two goals for the Leafs, while Ron Ellis and Billy McNeill added the others. Rookie Mike Corrigan, Mike Walton, Red Armstrong and Brian Conacher replied for Rochester. were beaten 5-3 by Phila- delphia Phillies, enabling Pirates to pull within a game and a half of the Na- tional League lead. The National League schedule winds up Sunday, with the Any combination of Dodger victories and Pirate losses to- talling two will eliminate Pitts- burgh. And then there are the Giants, If the Dodgers lose their two remaining games to the Phils and if the Giants sweep three from Pittsburgh and another from Cincinnati Monday, then the Giants and Dodgers will be in a playoff. Anybody know where Bobby Thomson is these days? As for the Dodgers--who did get a chance to play Friday-- they should have had the Pi- rates' luck. Actually, Los An- geles was very much in the game until Bill White hit a three-run homer in the seventh inning to give Philadelphia a Se vicwwrys The clabs go at it again today unless the rain heads east from Pittsburgh, as it was threaten- ing to do. In other National League games Friday, New York Mets beat Houston Astros 1-0 and St. Louis Cardinals shut out Chi- cago Cubs 2-0. White's -homer came off re- liever Ron Perranoski, who said he didn't get the ball in tight World Series, between the National League winner and American League champion Baltimore Orioles sla to start Wednesday. --AP Wirephoto Dodgers Lose Ground In Bitter Flag Race enough. It went high over the right-field wall. Larry Dierker retired 24 men in a row, but Ed Bressoud dou- bled just out of the reach of Lee Maye in left to lead off the ninth, went to third on a wild pitch and then scored on Ron Hunt's soft liner just past Joe Morgan at second. Dick Hughes pitched a three- hitter and Ed Spiezio clubbed a two-run homer in the St. Louis victory. Lou Brock added to his league-leading stolen base total with his 74th. New York Yankees assured themselves of a 10th place finish inthe American League with a 6-5 loss t@ Chicago White Sox. It marked the first time the Yankees finished in the cellar since ABs when tnere were tory with a two-run single in the lith inning. Smoky Burgess' run-scoring single in the ninth was the 136th pinch hit of his career and tied it for the White Sox. John Ro- mano's two-out single two in- nings later brought Mel Stottle- myre his 20th loss against 12 victories. CLEAR-UP YOUR AA PICTURE With this EXTRA High Performance TV antenna and be ready for VIVID COLOUR at its best. tind enfey Improved SPARK LING black and white pictures. Pf AVAILABLE Replace your old TV antenna, get Better Pictures with a New Super STARFIRE | by 'LINDSAY' EZ Lae SZ IN FIVE MODELS SSF-10 Williams Named Manager-Of-Year ROCHESTER, N.Y. (CP) -- Dick Williams, appointed man- ager of Boston Red Sox of the American League Wednesday, has been named the Interna- tional League's Manager of the OSHAWA MINOR HOCKEY ASSOCIATION REGISTRATION: 1966-67 SEASON Year. During his two-year stay as manager of the Leafs, the team won the Governor's Cup twice. : ROCHESTER, N.Y. (CP) -- Mike Epstein, 23-year-old Ro- chester Red Wings' first base- man, Thursday was named the International League's Rookie of the Year. YESTERDAY'S STARS Batting--Bill White, Philadel- phia, hit a three-run homer that powered the Phillies past the National League - leading Los Angeles Dodgers 5-3. . Pitehing--Dean Chance, Cali- fornia, pitched a two-hitter as the Angels blanked Cleveland Indians 3-0. Registration for the Oshawa Minor Hockey Associ- ation for the 1966 - 67 season will be conducted at the Oshawa Civic Auditorium on the following dates: MONDAY, 'October 3, 7:00-9:00 P.M. -- JUVENILE THURSDAY, October 6, 7:00-9:00 P.M, -- MIDGET SATURDAY, October 8, 8:00 - 12:00 A.M. -- BANTAM MONDAY, October 10, 7:00-8:50 P.M, -- BANTAM ISSF-19 SSF-16 13 She SSF-8 The registration fee for the 1966 - 67 season will be 50c per player. A skating and practice session will be held on all registration dates -- Bring your equipment. NOTE: Birth Certificates will be required befor any ployer commences @ jue game, so avoid missed games end bring your birth certificate on registration night. ENGINEERED , FOR EXCELLENT COLOUR BLACK & WHITE TELEVISION RECEPTION TRIO ANTENNAS LTD. 35 Division St., Oshawa 728-5143 made with grain," he said. an Rady lovato M! 07 Dut Ri Bc. with a driver|2ever ate bread and so it didn't pl H from Blancas, share the lead with two - under - par|U-S: and I take The field of 143, including 10|Sfegunee oe lke Playing 140s, Both' carded identical scores of 70-70--140, amateurs, was cut to 74 after Friday's 18 holes. Among those who missed the cutoff score of 150 were Ken Venturi of San Francisco, Billy Maxwell of In- dianapolis, Stan Leonard of Vancouver and Bob Charles of Christchurch, N.Z. Rodriguez, George Knudson of Toronto, the low Canadian, and Rod Funseth of Spokane, Wash., all share second place. Knud- son had a 70 Friday for 141. Funseth is 69-72--141. CHASE AGES KNUDSON Knudson is shooting to be the first Canadian to win the Open since 1954 when Pat Fletcher, now a club professional in Mont- real, turned the trick. Knudson said the chase for the $20,000 first - prize in the $100,000 tour- nament at Shaughnessy Golf and Country Club "is making an old man out of me." PENNANT RACE National League WL Pet, GBL TP Los Angeles 94 66 .588 2 Pittsburgh 92 67 .5791% 3 San Fran. 90 68 .5703 4 Los Angeles--At home (none). Away (2), at Philadelphia Oct. Pittsburgh--At home (3), San Francisco Oct. 1, (2), 2, Away (none), San Francisco -- At home (none). Away (4), at. Pitts. burgh Oct. 1 (2), 2; at Cincin- nati Oct, 3. | | @SMAWA TIMES | Available At NU-WAY PHOTO SERVICE 251 King St. E., Oshewe 8 x 10 -- 1.50 each 5x7 -- 1.25 each 20% Discount on Orders of 5 or More Pictures Massengale, Glover Capture Open Lead on wiew gua qaiananieanas tin beat to theiskies F. Tey St ee inay Ae ee Ee THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, October 1. 1966 7 Gary Cowan of Kitchener, United States amateur sham- pion, and John Russell af Van- couver had 149s, Co - favorites Jack Nicklaus and Billy Casper were both well off the pace. Nicklaus, who has won nearly $90,000 on the tour Siancas solved his own prob-| '2's year, had a 145. Casper, ,/lems last week by winring his|Who has won $110,000, had a Royer, |first Professional Golfers Asso-| 148. Mae Sits eEEEs SEG ices Le, ne Menttionl 'riday to create a four-|Everett Open, and $6,000. He was 18 under par in the 72-hole tournament, and scored 22 birdies and three eagles. "Before, I was always wor- tied about making the cut," said Blancas. "Now, I can just go out and) + play my game." The best score after two days of play was recorded Friday by Jack McGowan of Largo, Fla., who shot a four-under-par 67. It combined with his first- round 75 odd "9 fs Tawny me until I with Rex Baxter Jr., of Hous- F¢ y gol, Now'l dort(ton, 'Tex. and Chick Courtney Badin Doh of Lajolla, Calif. - aHadiwsn Sou High amateurs were Bert) Minne Ticehurst and John Johnson, . both of Vancouver, with 148s. made from two vitamin tablets WINERY LIMITE . .» the Peddler came to you with a thousand and one susprises; it was always a big day wheri he came around ! Well, we have a surprise for you--he still comes to you--every day! As a matter of fact if you turn to the classified sec- tion of this newspaper, you will find him. Like the peddler of yesteryear, the classified pages hold thousands of surprises -- and lots of news of the community too; and whatsmore, you may play peddler, by placing a want ad of your own, 1 it's fun, profitable and inexpensive. Phone now | and try it! - ; Call 723-3492 for a TIMES achig7, 'STEPHENSON'S | DARAGE @ Wheel Alignment @ Frame and Wheel Straightening @ General Repairs 15 CHURCH STREET Ph. 725-0522 Guarenteed Used Cors ROY W. NICHOLS Courtice and Bowmenville CHEVROLET, CORVAIR, OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE PHONE 728-6206 44 Yeors Serving You PICTURE RE-PRINTS MEET YOUR FRIENDS BEFORE & AFTER THE GAME IN 'The Regency Room' ROYAL HOTEL 171 BROCK N. DINING ROOM DISTRIBUTOR 136 GIBB STREET PHONE 723-3042 , SUDDARD'S BICYCLE SHOP GOLF EQUIPMENT FULL LINE OF C.C.M, and RALEIGH BICYCLES ler--Service--Parts KEYS MADE 497 SIMCOE ST. S$. PHONE 725-3979 ' Lee Bishop | RADIATOR REPAIRS - Clean id Recorli New and! Used Rodieters 42 Bond St. W. 725-1633 REESOR Fuel and Lumber Everything in Builder's supplies. Fuels. Specializing in summer eottege needs. PHONE 985-7951 PORT PERRY HOTEL Oshawa's Finest Hotel For--Parties-Sales Meetings Banquets -- Conventions Air-Conditioned Coffee re a eT Shop # ced on oo ra aha) OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY Oshawa-Whithy SPORTS Highlights ~o- TODAY SOFTBALL---OASA Junior 'A' _Playoffs--Niagarc-or-the-Lake Mero' | Plumbing vs Oshawa Scugog Cleaners, ot exend ey 8 v9 om; 2nd game. of 2-out-of-3° Southern Ontario finale... GAA Inter. | Brooklin Community Park, 8:30 p.m; Ontario finals, Brothers Lid. Monuments . « - of Distinction ist game of 2-out-of-d Southern | 668-3552 Whitby Peviometecraeins aE - SOFTBALL--OASA Intermediote 'C' Pleyoffe--Brocklin Concretes vs Merlin | i] Gece fica'. ak mab" se Peay Romeo. oe | Be h Cleaners and Niagara-on-the-Lake, at Hemilton, 3rd and deciding game of Southern Ontario finals, | Tune-ups, Licensed Mechanic |} | Free Check-Up SUNDAY, Oct. 2 MONDAY, Oct. 3 No Games Scheduled. Set resdy for Summer, Gomme te PICK-UP & DELIVERY 232 Play Applionces vs Gole's Lumber, at Alexondra Pork, 8:00 p.m; deciding game of semi-finc! series, TUESDAY, Oct. 4 SOFTRALL--Oshawa City & District Assoc, "City Championsh 3rd | TBALL--Oshewa High Schools Senior League--O'Nelll ot lin WaT cantiel ot Beran beth games et 4:18 pm. Sal Sntere } Senior Ande! ice, Bowmanville, 3: Eoke Onterio Junior Leegue--Clorke' et Whitby Henny, 4:15 m. HOCKEY--Exhibition Geme--Niagara Falls Flyers ve Oshawa Generals, et Civic Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. 932 BROCK $ T. N. WHITBY FREE 24-HOUR BURNER SERVICE By Our Local SAWDON'S FUELS FURNACE OIL -- FOOTBALL--Oshawa High Schools Junior L Eastdale ot and O'Neill at Central; both games at 4:15 p.m... . Leake Ontarlo Junior League--Whitby Anderson vs Courtice, at Bowmanville, 4:15 p.m. FOOTBALL--Onterio Junior Conference---Oshawa Hawkeyes vs Sci Rams, at Scarboro, 8:00 p.m. Leke rio District Sentor Whi Anderson at Bowmanville and Courtice vs Ajax, at Pickering; both games ot 3:00 p.m, FRIDAY, Oct. 7 FOOTBALL--Oshewa High School Leegue--(Junior) -- MeLeushiin ve Donevan, at 5:00 p.m. . . . (Senior, jentrol vs O'Neill, ot 6:30 p.m. and MeLaughlin vs Doneven, ot 8:15 p.m; all games at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Stadium. 5 AUTO AND TRUC RENTAL & LE HEADQUART HERT @ RENT BY HOUR, DAY OR WEEK!! KING EAST Phone 728-9641 10 STOVE OIL AND COAL ff 244 Brock St. S., Whitby ~ 668-3524 The Market Place of Handy SALE ITEMS THE OSHAWA TIMES | CLASSIFIED =| PAGES die SBI Fag ER AL metaaes