Porcupine Advance, 7 May 1936, 3, p. 5

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Organize for Tennis |; Toâ€"Morrow Night :. Tennis courts are drying up and the enthusiasts of the fast game are getting ready for a real season. They make their first move toward organizing for the 1936 season toâ€"morrow â€" (Friday) night when the annual meeting of the Timmins Tennis cluo is to be held in the town hall, beginning at eight O‘ciock. Members of Timmins Tennis Club and All Interested Asked to Attend Annual Meeting. who art 10 Lake Shore Team has Six New Players Now Etuff. Six n<wsomers are being counted alll of th:m with fine baseball reputations, and what with alreadyâ€"acquainted loâ€" cal athletes who have put in a winter of sport here, others not listed and thel usual one or two whose talents are not heralded except on the practice field, Lake Shore‘s squad should be plenty hot. St. Thomas Touch Leading baseball names of the newâ€" comers are "Tip" Miller, who played with St. Thomas and Stratford when those clubs were crowned with the O.B.A.A. senior laurel and ‘"Lefty" Weeks, who did the same thing. Miller, a short stop, was rated the best in the amateur game last year while Weeks was good enough to hold @a leading spot in throwing averages as a Brockville pitcher in the highlyâ€"rated St. Lawrence League while it was still amateur. To start at the starting place there will be a familiar figure behind the bat in Mike Timmis, team coach this year, playing his third year of ball here, an Irish battler who argues every point and keeps a game pepped up while his pitcher handling and stickwork are Oof high calibre. 4 Out on the hill top where the flinger dominated everything "Red" Busey, youthful star of last year‘s mound corps, will lead those who throw them from the right side and Weeks will be the ranking star of the four flingers. "Lefty" Cooper, local boy who pitchec Juniors to a title in 1934, and Blanchâ€" field, rightâ€"hander from Niagara Falls, will make up the mound staff of four. Two New Infielders First and second spot in the infield will be filled by familiar faces with "Lefty" Starr being counted on for the startâ€"off sack angq Carl Harding likely startâ€"off sack angq Carl Harding likely to hold down second. Changes start from there. Tip Miller is the short field choice, although he‘s not here yvet, and thirdâ€"base duties will be shared by Hewitt, Sarnia boy, who playeq with the St. Thomas Tom Cats champs of 1933 and Doherty, an Ameriâ€" can lad, who did red light duty in one of the finals with Toburn last year. Lou Mornau, Amherstburger by birth, ast Year‘s Finalists With Toburn Much Improved to Start New Season. All member ntlteres be el playing it rcundwcork has bren laid, m the sturdy oaks about xt year‘"‘ is not jJust that, from the talent listing asâ€" rour reporter from sources 1 as giving the straight of the club are requested idance, as well as any sted in the game. Offiâ€" lected and plans madse 4 or. 50c 10 oz. $1,.00 Your nearest araggist has it. 4 ozr. 80c A/ VA ~Aecdesnuamenit KR rub in Olympene and see how aches and pains quickly disappear. Here‘s the protective, healing and antiseptic linnment for every purposeâ€"endorsed by athletes and families everywhere. Keep QOlympene always in your home. Use it also for cuts, burns and bruisesâ€"for common head colds. It brings sure and swift relief. NORTHROP and LYMAN CO, LIMITED, Toronto, Canada hockey captain, figur® <pots. For utility spot th Windsor boy, for in with "Buck" Behie, stop, Billy Kerny the wide open space Adam Craig, who t bail grow from the will manage the club mis as coach. List of Averages for the Teacher‘s Bowling Lbeague AVErages 10r i@ast pCriOUG,.â€"â€"Iv. 188, M. Morrison 170, E. Acton 1 MacDonald 163, E. Blyth 159, I. drews 159, M. Kerr 157, W. McPF 156, H. White 152, E. Mackie 14 Murphy 145, D. Taylor 138, D. Cluskie 129, G. Honeywell 126, O. | say 126, C. Young 126, G. Dohert] N. Richardson 119, D. Caswell 11 McLeod 107. Averages for year:â€"M. Morrisot R. Rinn 164, G. Everett 164, V. Kinley 164, M. Kerr 161, C. MacD 161, E. Acton 156, E. Bytsh 152, I arews 151, H. White 150, 0. Ramsa M. Tackaberry 143, W. McKelvic D. Taylor 133, G. Doherty 132, N. Donald 125, M. Thorburn 125, C. 1 124, E. Mackie 122, H. Prettie 1. Tatterson 119, L. Browne 118, G. H well 116, M. Richardson 110, D. Cj 108, D. McCluskie 105, C. Mann 81 Recently I have given sever cises covering the most imports of the swingâ€"gripping the c dressing the ball, and starting back rightâ€"up to starting th swing. Now I bring you to a the swing where the shot is spoiled. Most players look upon the downâ€" swing as the only really important part of the swing. This is wrong because your downswing cannot be one bit better than your backswing. Having made the correct backswing, all you have to do is keep your chin properly pointed and swing the club downward toward the ball. Any attempt to guide the club or consciously direct parts of your body in the downswing results only in upâ€" setting the swing as a whole. It spoils the timing and blending of the various movements. When you give most of your attention to pointing your chin you‘ll find that the rest of your swing is under subconscious control, the sort of control under which it is almost imâ€" possible to make a mistake., Practise swinging down and your chin pointed back of the covering the hitting position n I‘ll toll you more about the c It was Bank Holiday farm laborer, had do clothes for the occasior put on his newlyâ€"acquir parading the village h postman. ‘"‘Gosh, Bert," Bert Thought he had a Big Bargain in the Footwear "Â¥e go look smar ye get such big down at them pt said in all serio bargain. They w than I tak>, but ThE AwtiseEptic LINIMENT L2 Danny W1 t vear and By ALEX MORRISON rom Mil ink Holiday and Bert, the er, had donned his best the occasion., and had also Number 906 y were but the Kerr 157, W. McKé 152, E. Mackie 148 . ‘Taylor ©138, 1). Honeywell 126, O. R ng 126, G. Doherty 119, D. Caswell 112 ear:â€"M. Morrison 168, Everett 164, V. Mcâ€" err 161, C. MacDonald 6, E. Byth 152,;1. Anâ€" ite 150, O. Ramsay 146, 143, W. McKelvie 140, or the ieft Ti@id spo ht, steady gardene Buck" Moore, senio urcd an for the othe â€"acquired boots. While lage he met the local Bert," said the latter, t an‘ all! But why did _ boots?" Bert looked roudly. "Well, Jim," he usness, "‘twas such a rere three sizes bigger upon the downâ€" illy important part is wrong because 0t be one bit better iven several exerâ€" st important parts ing the club, adâ€" t be one bit better Having made the vou have to do hree ame ‘s Langdon a duty al Mike T 34, N. MACâ€" 5, C. Young ttie :120, . , G. Honeyâ€" â€"D. Caswell ched base« oots" here 31 l keeping ball, In ext week chin. t] Rinn 07 e club downâ€" age of rde or MC An lvi )T According to a despatch this week from London, England, 50 people in 14 automobiles are to make the first moâ€" tor tour to the Arctic this summer. They will go to Liinahamari, on the Arctic Ocean, and close to the Russianâ€" Siberian border. R. R. Gordonâ€"Borret, of Folkestone, who is planning the tour, said that the final 400 miles of the 3200â€"mile trip will be within the Arctic Circle. ‘The tour will require three weeks. "I have chosen the middle of June for the start." he said, "because we shal obtain the full benefits of the midnigh! sun andq because the mosquitoes at that time of the year are less troublesome.‘ ieorgia Farmer Played Safe All the Way Along the steps of his tumbl smoking a corncob pipe stopped for a drink of w "How is your cotton Comil asked the newcomer. Plan Tour of Arctic in Fourteen Motor Cars "Ain‘t got none," said the Cracker. "Didn‘t you plant any?" "Nope, ‘fraid of boll weevils." ‘"‘Well, how is your corn?" "Didn‘t plant none; ‘fraid there wasn‘t going to be no rain." The visitor was abashed, but cheerful still,. "Well, how are your potatoes?" "Ain‘t got none; stairt 0‘ potato bug "Railly, wh the stranger. ‘"‘*Nothin‘. L pound and 175â€"pound New Y wrestling champions, respectiv were caught by the camera, tun up for district elimination . fin: Cowell is seen here applying chancery hold on Crawford. CANADIAN OWNED HORSE RUNS THIRD IN KENTUCKY DERBY Here is Indian Broom, ( dian owned horse in the opened at 15 to 1 they \ start but â€"reached a conté stretch. ‘Those who fset race, owned by Morton | Brevity, favourite for the (From The New farmer sat bare In Chancery JU ind Al C 175â€"poun ampions, pla Al Crawford, 145â€" pound New York ions, â€" respectively he camera, tuning elimination â€" finals. it barefooted on bleâ€"down shack, u pl om, cwned by Major A. C. Taylor, who turned in the best effort ever made by a Canaâ€" i the American classic race, the Kentucky Derby. Although odds on Indian Broom hey were knocked down to 2 to 1 just before pos;, time. The horse got away to a slow contending position in the first half mile. He weakened badly in the run down the fyet the horse to show collected $3.80 for a $2.00 ticket. Bold Venture, winner‘of the ton L. Schwartz. Mew York, was the longest shot in 18 years and paid $43.00 for $2.00, r the race, ran second, paying $5.00 to place and $4.00 to show. strangel THt PORCUPINE ADVANCB, TTMMINS, ONTARIO on Two important annual meetings of sport bodies in Timmins are coming along shortly. Toâ€"morrow evening the Timmins Tennis Club meets in the town hall to elect its officers. Tennis is definitely on the upâ€"grade here after having been through a few seasons in which interest and executive ability apâ€" peareq to be missing. Last year there was one ‘big tourney in Timmins and plans were ready for a real Northern Ontario tournament which never came off, since it was organized a bit late in the year. The coming season should see a large number of additional members in the local club, as well as an improved roster at the Hollinger, McIntyre and Dome clubs. None of these are expenâ€" sive. They limit their activities to the idea of getting as much enjoyment out of the game as possible.‘ Not only the present members of the NOt on!y Thne S Qi uwi clud, but prospective members have been invited to attend toâ€"morrow night‘s meeting. The other annual is of the Timmins Curling Club, another popular game here in which participation rather than onlooking is of prime importance. Durâ€" ing the coming season the local curiers will be hosts to all the clubs of the T. N. O. district, when the year‘s most important «eurling bonspiel in the North is held. Monday, May 18th, will be the eleventh time the directors of the club have gathered to elect officers and it will be the first time the curling club members will have met in the, spring. The real reason behind it all is to get properly organized for the big bonspiel. . get the committees appointed and at. work, and get the prizes lined up. | | A Goog Beginning ‘ The decision of the Porcupine Men‘s: Ssoftball Association to limit the numâ€" ber of teams competing in the league this year to six is a wise one. It is next to impossible to play more than three games a week in the league as at present constituted, and one game a week per team is none too many. Those who don‘t play firstâ€"class softâ€" ballâ€"and there are plenty of young in Timmins who enjoy a game without being in the class that specâ€" tators like to watchâ€"are at liberty to and should form a second league, operâ€" ating whenever the opportunity turns up. They‘l! have just as much fun as their more proficient contemporaries and won‘t have to be bothered with the inevitable technicalities that arise from sport as at present organized. There is a definite shortage of good softball players in Timmins. No oneé, fcrtunately, has ever begun the importâ€" | ing business, and the consequence has l been that some positions at least are !hard to fill. The battery in softball is |relativley more important than it is in the parent game, baseball. And that‘s where the Poreupine is short. This seaâ€" son will undoubtedly find a few more new men on the mound but it isn‘t because they‘ve been enticed to come to Timmins that they‘ll be there. It‘s because they just happened to arrive, along with a hundred other people who have foung joos in the camp. Baseball Gossip The gates come down in the Temisâ€" kaming Baseball League next Priday midnight. Until then the prospects of the three, or possibly four teams in the Northern group will not be known. Certainly there will be‘new talent. New pitchers will appear on every one of the teams but how good they‘ll be, nobody can tell yvet. Lefty Goldsmith, who was rumoured to be in this part of the North, is now reported to be playing with a Southern Ontario club. The_same thing appli¢s to a hundred and one other rumours hearg recently. Most of the Kirkland Lake group players have been signed and the teams there are satisfied with what they‘ve got. But for another few days at least it will be next to imposâ€" sible to say who‘ll be playing where in the northern T.BL. group. From All Levels 4 4 t § commees § i i; 4) t § § smm N (Current Digest Teacher: "Now, I want y how clean James‘ hands James, tell the class how it keep your hands so nice?" James: ."Ma mal dishes every mornin Plainville Courierâ€"News:â€" Another way to give orangeade some extra viâ€" tamins is to put in some orange juice, Though they are all "big shots" nowâ€"bank manaâ€" gers, prominent merchants, professional men and captains of industryâ€"still the incidents of your boyhood on a bicycle with them are among your happiest memoâ€" ries! That‘s right, isn‘t it, Dad? Well!l There‘s a "chip off the old block" in your house and he is just as anxious to own a bike as you once were. After all, boys haven‘t changed much since you were one. So get your boy a bicycle just as soon as you can and let him enjoy the thrill and freedom and fun that only a bicycle can give. Don‘t delay because, as you know, boys grow up very quicklyâ€"become "big shots"‘ and have to work and worry instead of laugh and play in the sunshine. So help your son to enjoy a full boyhood by getting him a C.C.M. bicycle. I say a C.C.M. because it‘s the bike I first selected, and in all my years on the track I‘ve never found anything better. The C.C.M. is a really beautiful piece of precision machinery. _ If it wasn‘t it would never carry me at top speed hour after hour around the race track and it‘s not my C.C.M.‘s fault that "we‘"‘ don‘t go faster. and be sure it‘s a CLEAN HANDS C‘mon, Dad. Buy your boy or your girl a bicycle lass how it so nice?" makes m Schumacher Hardware and Furniture Company 31 First Avenue u to nolice ilways are. is that you wash the On Display Softball League Narrows Down to Six Team Affair The Porcupine‘s sixâ€"team . softball league gets under way on the Monday May 25th holiday when the old rivals, Friedmans and Schumacher, meet again. It was all straighteneqg out at the executive meeting of the associaâ€" tion on Monday night which brought plenty of surprises. In addition to the two teams mentioned, Westinghouse, Palace Theatres, Tuxis Grads and Mcâ€" Intyre are the others. south Porcupine appears to be elimâ€" inated but it isn‘t. The players of the Dome team have been taken into the Westinghouse fold, a team sponsored by the George Taylor Hardware. Timâ€" mins Juniors have gone in with the Grads to make a pretty powerful orâ€" ganization. Workers Coâ€"operative of South Porcupine was one of the teams dropped when the thing was put to a vote. Coniaurum failed to turn up Aat the meeting so was . automatically dropped. Combinations Solve Immediate Difficulties. New Player Regulations Introduced Keep Rosters Open Until End of Season. â€" No Transfers After June 15th. No Deadline on New Players There is rno deadline now on signing up players who may take part in league cames. The only ‘stipulation is that all players in a team taking part in the playoffs must have played at least three regularly scheduled league games. A single team may have as many as 18 players on its roster but once they sign cards to play with one team, no transâ€" fers may be effected after June 15th. These regulations, the executive agreed, covered all possible situations. Double headers will be played the same as last year on weekâ€"ends,. A single game on Wednesday evening will complete the week‘s activities. The top three teams at the end 0f the seasorf will be eligible for playâ€" offs. Second and third teams will play a bestâ€"twoâ€"outâ€"ofâ€"three series to decide which shall meet the league leaders in the final bestâ€"twoâ€"outâ€"ofâ€"three series. In connection with the opening game on May 25th, the executive proposes selling tickets, with two "door‘" prizes. The fifteen dollar entry fee required So Long! at sSchumacher T orchy Peden CE 'â€"9‘-.â€"“.-“-0'-."‘ How to Buy a Bicycle When you buy a bicycle examine it carefully first. See that the two sprockets are in perfect alignment so that the chain will run smoothâ€" ly. See that the two wheels spin freely and are lined up so that when you ride the bicycle the two wheels track like one. See that all the bright parts are heavilvâ€" chromiumâ€"plated. Be that all the bright parts are heavily chromiumâ€"plated. _ Be sure that the spokes are rustproof and that the tires are Duniops. Be sure that the bicycle you buy is a C.C.M. and then you will get the best there is in every detail. C.C.M; "Girl‘s" or ‘‘Boy‘s"‘ ... .:.$32.50 "OGirl‘s"‘ or s ... ‘"Crescent‘‘ Men‘s. ... "‘Ladies ".. 'BoyScout e "Standard Roadster . ‘"Road Racers $37.50 : Motorbnke M.‘ ‘Flyte" .. C.C.M. Delnvery (less basket Time payments may be arrar small extra charge. Ask your d catalogue. ®mooonononn monoononno 3233333 Porcupine Hardware and | Furniture Company 42 Golden Ave eaor. Third and Pine 62 Third Avenugue Ideal Hardware and Furniture Company, 1A4d. was selllit North Ba sauntered t en He was told the 64 dozen. He then | he could buy eggs land during the dis the individual offe $5 that he would of each team has now been paid into the treasury. T+n dollars is for league membership and the other five 4s a guarantce that no games will be deâ€" fauilted . North Bay Man Wins Bet and Makes Money on Eggs 10 cents per do psned. Mr. Roc individual‘s div on. Mtr. Roche very short time hs had SOlIq LC ui dozen he had for sale at the time of the bet.. Mr. Roche collected his five dollar bet ang went his way with a smile. He figured out that counting the five dolâ€" lar bet he got at the rate of 45 cents for his eges, which is not so bad these days. He will be ready at any future time to take on any similar bet without hesitation. New York Sun:â€"It is easily debatable whether listening to a radio accountâ€"of a world series hbaseball game is as exâ€" citing as it used to be in the old days coming over the ticker. Radio announâ€" cers qo work themselves up in a feverâ€" ish fury describing how the pitcher is now rubbing the back of his hand across his mouth before beginning the windâ€"up. Much more effective was the old pause on the ticker while the listenâ€" er held his breath and theon the verdict, ball one, or strike one. For Women, Men and Boys Marshallâ€"Ecclestone Limited The lat« 21 1¢€ Our Line is Complete Kee Our Wide Range Crescent â€" Mien Boy Scout".... Standard Road: Road Racers"‘ $ ‘Motorbike®"‘ . .. up a as told the 1¢€ man w elling very its V t time h: had for sal 11 be arranged for a k your dealer for a South Porcupine ter Bay story is about von a bet and made at 15 cents per doâ€" ‘s that E. J. Roche gs as usual at.the when an individual enqirired the price. gs3 were 25 cents per )lq Mr. Roche that it 15 cents per dozen ussion on the matter red to bet Mr. Roche not sell his eggs at mo matter what hapâ€" romptly covered the 0t and the bet was once was shouting: , dozen." And ine A 12 had sold the=1"7 alo at the time of the Timmins | Vimmins PAGE FTVB

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