Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 8 Apr 1935, 1, p. 7

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will run 0 Fileen D. Laughlin all her sta endon Pla went into the racing Then the col Not sit 1860 whe cameâ€" ro Carlton many thorough been nan owners thtr The Kin at Woodbi1 day, May | value of : Canada. ‘I higsh value gift 0o majest Torontc 76th rene continuou American mer Wrig Jockey Cl Canadianâ€" vears havi ind you Temiskaming Baseball Annual Meeting This Month «ol i smcs ns nc on mss esmm mssn enc mm ce Om ie nc . Says Listaro the Choice :O"f' fOI’ the Klng Gulneas'(m ada Send Historic King‘s Plate Renewal Draws 41 Canadianâ€"bred Entries. Largest Field Since 1860,. T* be Run at W*odâ€" hine Park on May 19th. 5 DOOR PRIZES 5 to the music of AL PIERINI and his VAGABOND KINGS Dance ... moreée Riverside Pavilion Brother Discuss Pitching Stategy at the @Very 11 41 T ico Mi da t.â€"is shown above at an untusl pping on to the diamond. Ap bu i1lje n _ cliff TI n al puUu bre it 10 Rain Others nominated and their owners are Beach Stable, Crystal Beach; T. S. Cochenour, Papalico; M. R. Cowell, Parma Violet; R. W. R. Cowie, Disâ€" count: S. B. Crawford, Goggles; G. H. Ellis, Bandman; J. G. Fair, Rural Shower and Big Bus; Alexander Fraser, Dimark and Big Dollar; C. E. Furry, March Breeze; Robt. Grahan, Beechâ€" view: George Hardy, Oltation and Galâ€" thea: M. E. Hardy, Prince Fleet; Hasâ€" tings Stable, Sweet Edwin; H. C. Hatch Chickpen and Donstick; G. A. Northâ€" graves, Whichprig; C. E. Pedlar, Eastâ€" eroam: Mrs. Charles Robson, Vingt Cingqg and Epicuris; Mrs. W. Russell, Linesman:; J. E. Smallman, Rightfoot and Andante; South View Stable, Natal; W. H. Wright, Worthing, Tax Free, Boom Days and Speygold. One has only to glance over the list| above and he can readily see that the 1935 running of the King‘s Plate will be one of the most contested stakes seen in the Dominion in many years.! See if we‘re not right. SUGGESTS ALTERATION®S MADE IN THE CUP DEFENDER LJs Angeles Timss:â€"Louisiana has »seen owned by the Indians, Spain, the Unitsd States and Huey, best of t Sympath some vel! mates Hillco Mr. portsman ‘l1Â¥21 at Long 451 obbed of these bsence of Lis njury which n hese two stak Mlate. Lipton mpa unty than | nment bine Park en and Don Whichprig; Mrs. Cha: ind Epicuris 11 Del Court the Se vanta| Rainb undé ount enabl Endea though st: creditable nder colou up . CC letter in en ipled wi 11 )1 fend on precipitated an h and American les last week by which the designâ€" ith‘s defsated 1934 ir, charged for th» et "alterations‘‘ of t Club‘s rules gave nder, a decided He said that the crew was not takâ€" <r ballasting und®r Rainbow to reach 1. There has been e New York Yacht thexy are hn .On.the South Porcupine club in that | 0t 444 war year George Lake, now publisher| Apy ' of The Porcupine Advance in Timmins| now i ~and satisfied to take his sport at golf | cial" | and curling, pitched and played the |ed in outfield. Toron Of the ‘I‘immirf'f.\u‘-am in 19. could nc r:m.-rrz‘ne}' much exvep Ailâ€"Americen footbhall playoer, C who played the tak out of the field spot. The Timmits catther glasses and was the best recsiv the lsaguse. AIke Fearce, who n carly always : dofin with Schumacher teams nov amoutfielder for Timmins in 1914 sSwastikan said. mins Temis bat be er; . LsbLy »KA pitchers; ‘"Dope" second base and zon, third base; of Indians callec Six." outfielders. "Johnny Hoga mins the last yv There being no baseball news of thel Day. current vintage about for the moment| fore it the "Doc" was finally persuaded up:ml lege be to tell of those days around 1914 when LAG to the Porcupine district had four smart| °4 the teams, Timmins. Schumacher, South! It w Porcupine and Dome Mines. mmaxt "Doc" was going to school at thataCFde time, he said. He played for the Dome , "DO0¢" team on first base. Others of that| Summe club were "Monty‘‘ Montgomery, catchâ€"| mMust 1 er; "Lefty" Farr and Jack Oswald, Shape pitchers; ‘"Dope" and Tommy second base and short sto>: Case Cur-f Baseball in 1914 in the Porcupine Camp By Jack Maunder In The Northern News Baseball days when Timmins brought j in a complete team from Ohio Stat°| University, among them an Allâ€"Ameriâ€" l can football player named Cherry . <] and Schumacher did wholesome imâ€"| porting with its talent coming fxom! Notre Dame University in the Hoosier State of Indiana . . . when a game was | "called" on the 20th of June for six inches of snow on the field . . . when business just quit on days when there was a game . . . all these are recalled by Dr. J. F. Edis, of Swastika, for The Nonthern News the other day. ! uces So we may yet live to see the day when the Allan up winners won‘t be able to tack onto their team: name "Amateur Champions of the World" without taking a trip across the pond to defend their title. Dr. J. F.»Edis,:of bwa: Recalls the Days There were Four C Teams in This Camp. Canadians on Internationals The International League, Europse‘: big time hockey outfit, has seven enâ€" tries: three in Britain, two in France, one in Berlin, and the other in Prague. There are Canadians on all of them at present, but the other lads are up the game quickly and it may not be so lOnsg until the league is truly interâ€" national. Right now, says Mr. Argus, some cf those teams can give any single team of Canadians a real battle. They‘re just a little weak on substituâ€" tion. Pick the ‘best Canadians from the league and you‘d have a worid Jeating amateur team, Mr. Argus thinks. batk hockey over there. They haven‘t encugh big rirks, Paris records seem to be among the best, for reports state that the Mcnarchs had 70,000 people to watch them play five games this season, the meost imnortant crowd numâ€" bering 20,000. Few Canadian rinks acâ€" commodate that many people. The Englishman takes his hockey in a strange fashionâ€"mixed with beer or wine. Fancy what the result of that would be in Ontario! But in the O Country it serves "to whet interest in the game." ally a report drifts in that a Canadia team has won again, it‘s taken more 0 less as a matter of course. Canadia teams going over there are rarely beat en, but according to Percy Argue, wh accompanied the Winnipeg Monarch on their European tour this winter, i won‘t be long until Canada will have t send over better teams, if the recorg i to be kept clean. There isn‘t enough money in th gams over there to warrant profession al tcams yet, ut the "amateurs" an "commercials" get along very well T England they have a few commercia leagues going now and English boy make up the majority cf the players There is one big difficulty that hold batk hockey ovesz there. They haven‘ We don‘t hear much on this the Atlantic about how hockey ting along in the British Isl continental E@r¢pe. When oc Old Country Brand of Hockey Improves il ttams yet, ‘commercials‘ England they eagues going on t ‘nd ) be T he am> inada will Soon have to Send Better Teams or Stand Danger of Frequent Defeat. RACEâ€"Yachts n the Miamiâ€"Nassau race are shown under way off thi coast of Florida. ald Do Timin|i alled an who played for Tim vear\th:y were in th , of Swastika, Days when Four Classy : Ad ittle in 1933 ams n 1914 ind *.. Commercial League Planned for Canada O hC i6 1€ I "Pop" Gray also threw them . for South End. Bill Hattch .was an outâ€" fielder. A fsllow hamed Gumpy was behind â€"the bat. Homer L. Gibson managed the team. The‘South End team was the most ‘ llustrious of the bunch in the matter | of its 1914 players carrying on in baseâ€" | ball. Two of them went up to the major leaguesâ€"Berger, the firstâ€"sacker and Klein who played short stop. Bergâ€" er was with Cleveland. l Sunday ball was the usual thing then ! and ‘the four clubs got a lot of supâ€" l port playing as they were in a compact group. "They just locked up the towns | when there was a ball game and everyâ€" ibody turned out," "Doc" â€"recalls. _ _What did the players work at? â€" Many of them worked in the Porcupine all I year round but the lads who came in didn‘t have to huri themselves. They had "baseball jobs." mer?i Quebe to dec finc The winnah? In 1914 it was the Dome Mines Club. sters: Maxi pean and G ard Robin also fifteen. drew a capaci certly, was were seen for cony at Madi ICE CARNTVAL AT NEW YORK PROVED A LITTLE "HIGH HAT a highschool lass from Fulton, Miss, who recently astounded track exâ€" perts of the United States by taking the measure of the redoubtable Stella Walsh. She whipped the great Olympic runner in the final of the United States National A.A.U. 50â€"metre sprint, stepping the disâ€" tance in .6 seconds to equal the world mark. Miss Stephens also won the rightâ€"pound shot put event, with a rightâ€"pound heave of 39 aters Miatl times to E. Commerci offs. It was a threeâ€"team league b° it wound up for some Oof the co boys on Tmmins and Schumach« o go back to schosl and they mers baseball In 1€ Beat Stella W alsh n for.the first time in the balâ€" Madison Square Garden. The European and American figureâ€" performed, notably twa youngâ€" faxi Herber «of Munich (Euroâ€" d German champion at fifteen) bin Lee, American champion, ind da 1 im uniqu 1C C official the usual thing then s got <a lot of supâ€" y were in a compact )wd a th ied kel Belt League is d as a "commerâ€" icials were includaâ€" x conducted from threw ; themfor atch .was an outâ€" imed Gumpy was around Labour team league beâ€" ome of the colâ€" ind Schumazsher e. They played i2ir heads. The support. When he plate in the middle 30‘s he > ‘14 club wauld i and Mariâ€" Plavofis for Carnival, which n New York reâ€" that ~tonâ€"hots ‘ime in the balâ€" om Sud Play Fi€ Rochester A year ago cognized Ru Number 576 During the last few days I‘ve run across several players who I played wi‘h three or four years ago. At that time most of them were playing in the lsw eighties. Naturally they wanted to get down into the seventies. I told them that if they didn‘t improve their swings they‘d get worse instead of better. Most of them laughed at me. Ted:y transfers down in Quebec, he replied that they had none of this worry beâ€" cause there was no import rule "We have no import trouble," Therrien deâ€" clared. "The clubs just go ahead and| play what men they can get." Jess Spring, coach of the somewhat squelched Brockville Magedomas, anâ€" nounced that the club would play in the Q@uebec Amateur Hockey Association' next winter. Ir other words, the O.H.A.| appears to be losing its Senior Bl champions of 1934â€"35.. Reading beâ€"! tween the lines, the idea is gained that the Ontario import tangles are Lhol cause for the club‘s decision. said that Brockville originally intended to play with the Easterners last wintex'i but finally accepted the invitation to join up with the O.H.A. The latter then turned around and refused the applicaâ€" tions for the transfer of certain promiâ€" nent players who were with Oshawa one year before. These pucksters were| kept out of hockey during the recent campaign because Oof the uncalledâ€"for stand by the O.H.A. .By entering the O.H.A. fold, Brockville seniors were enâ€" titled to four imports but actually did not get the payers although they qualiâ€" fied under the residence rule. Hence the Magedomas have announced they will turn to the Quebec Assoziation next fall after all to enjoy the policy which is more of the live and let live type. What the O.H.A. wants is the adop-i tion of other branches of its rule whereâ€"| by a senior club can import four playâ€" ers and a junior club two puckâ€"chasers| for one season providing they establish | residence before October 15. On the, other hand the parent C.A.H.A. enâ€" forces the interâ€"branch rule which is dated January 1, of the previous winter : â€"President Gilroy has enforced it so well that there were no moves from one! district to another during the past year.| During the past the writer has been able to get firstâ€"hand information reâ€" garding the import or transfer situationl in other territories of, the C.A.H.A.l When Art. Therrien, coachâ€"manager of the Montreal Verdun Junior, was asked what was being done about playser transfers down in Quebec, he replied that they had none of this worry beâ€" frem the pow Gardens. The Ontario Hocke hockey official tice of theste Q.H.A. withou one of the: Expect Fireworks at C.A.H.A. Meet the Ontario I o put across ind it begins affiliated bran o swallow all the pow that it mu ion loom C in Hal ithering to be Held Shortâ€" ly at Halifax Expected to Hear Grievances Aired. 1€ HEORIES ! er Democrat and Chronic go we thought we had Russia. Now all we can must have been two other 1em can brea} Alex J. Morrison hcoming annual confab 0 an Amateur Hockey Associa H i m ZTrYy C which 1CE lin 1€ h 11 have rough knowing Then you can y appioximate c, he replied is worry beâ€" ort‘rule "We Therrien deâ€" o ahead and A mprovement > himself as and some 100. Othe 11 be hel cant>n imation ager of ; asked player replied IT‘cd :y me of it 1€ of l1d New Liskeard Spceaker:â€"It is abou time Old Ontario publishers and busiâ€" ness men to00k a little more notice 0 the scheme Sault Ste. Marie men, wit! the assistance of Hon. Pétsr: Heenan have committed the Ontario Governâ€" ment to. The time to remedy this conâ€" dition of affairs is before any mor provincial money is spilled into r»otky gulchss of the North Shore. Temiskaming Baseball _ Meet Near End of April Toronto‘s hopes for the Stanley Cup fell still further on Saturday night when the Leafs took a 3â€"1 trimming on their own ice at the hands of the myâ€" sterious Montreal Maroons. Thers was no doubt about which was the betâ€" ter team on Saturday and although the Leafs did try hard to break up that cast iron Maroon defence in the last period, the Montrealers were much too well organized. Timmins seems to be fairly well dividâ€" ed in support of the finalists. It is only natural that the Ontario team would have good support here, but there are a surprising number of fans who have been cheering for the Maroons right since the playdowns began. There‘s inlenty of money changing hands on the games. At least one bet was placed at 3 to 1 on the Maroons to win the series before the Saturday night game, but it would be hard to get that now. Maroons Win 3 to 1 in Saturday‘s Game The next game in the Stanley Cup series comes off on Tuesday night at the Montreal Forum. There isn‘t a seat left in the big Montreal rink for what is fondly hoped by some to be the last game of professional hockey of the 1934â€"35 season. Toronto‘s Hopes for the Stanley Cup Fall Still Furâ€" ther. Next Game in Monâ€" treal. s to ioack a team. HOllinger might O0iâ€" fer support, in which case the team weuld preobably be known as "Hollinger‘ just as McIntyre takes its name from the mins athletic assOdciation. "A good team will pay its own way," Mr. Platus told The Advance. What the league would like to see is a norâ€" thern group with Timmins, McIntyre, Dome and TIroquois Falls. McIntyre and the Falls will be in again this year, but it is still doubtful if Dome will make the grade. Lack of a suitable playing field is one check. There is still mOre than a month in which Temiskasing League teams may acquire players. Despite the roundâ€" absut connection with the O.BA.A., whose residence rule is fixed at March 15, Northern teams may add to their lineâ€"ups unfil May 15, as the system works now. The only catch is that players can‘t come from any Southern Ontario point governed by the O.B.A.A. fo¢r transfers must be granted by the O.B.A.A. team before March 15. The whose intwres enough, might to a tea ng 290t] Good Team Here Would Pay Its Own W President. â€" Can Still Get Players fro: Southern Ontario before May 15th. dow in 4 renience Of rEpre anda and Kirkland lderation that mak 1€ JEWISH TIGERSâ€"Two of the few Jewish 7pl“a;§"¢;i'.'s'â€"‘i71;”tlw ma":i‘(-)â€"rs aro Tigers. They are Isadore Goldstein, LEFT, and Hank Greenbere of WIilH o the h1 Ml Advancd kaming Baseba ably hold its an Coming Down the Stretch Together ?recd n tLAe least two ; ew. Timmi in baseball et together Hollinger Lak it 1t N gue ibil greo 1 off t C it 1€ to see the South‘s pSl have players lined uj obeyving their own a ence rule, Along com player and the club } placing him without 1 local talent, which i scarce. The situation probs this year, nor even be Ottawa Valley players but those from the 8 of luck from C Abo can North unt they do d the Stuth North in the \ just because ou a little longer? On the other Lo see the Sout!l Meet Reg. Follett find him one of the best. Furthermore Reg. knows clothes. He should, he‘s been wearing them all his life. Years before Reg‘s time his grandfather J. J. Follett founded the well known firm Follett Ltd., Custom Tailors, Toronto. So we might say figuraâ€" tively Reg was born well dressed. Seriously though Lawâ€" rence is happy to announce that he is fortunate in securing the services of Reg. FPollett, Men‘s Shop 7 Pine St; 8: Tj hetrn kind Ma Lawrence mt d Of bas ibout Ma ind fans from the The usu ted Stat diamond: i Way, Says League from Anywhere but WI h W 1V 11 1 immins ‘@asy enoug)1 view. Thov T ball in vhyv wWaV entit dOwWI t chang! clarified e North JUS 118 l id 1j OLll O1l

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