Porcupine Advance, 11 May 1936, 1, p. 5

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second Is Open Second base is a spot they‘d like to feel surer about. Stan Lemon or Bert Wells will not be playing this year and while material at present on hand makes for a full infield with piecing out here and there, none of the candiâ€" dates comes as a secondâ€"sacker. There will be no worries on first with Milt Fries back. Second may be looked after â€"by Ty Gallip@au, Smiths Falls player who arrived iast week and has the name of being good at either secâ€" ond short or third. The short field spot has three posâ€" They had hop@d at Wrightâ€"Harâ€" greaves to get Bill Tennant but that Emiths Palls ace decided in favour of Creighton Mine and right now the lines out now may land one prize fork flingâ€" er, much publicized "down below" and it is on the pitChing problem that Dunâ€" canites are working. By Jack Maunder Kirklangâ€" Likc, May 11 (Special to The Advance»â€"Pitching is what bothers Wrightâ€"Harzreaves just now,‘ seven days from the dropping of the deadline to get playsrs, with the exception of college students who can come here up till June 1. Sso far the only throwers there are Sam Currie, Pete Hackett, both of them have been around a long time as ball players go and "L@fty" Dunn, who threw them in a few games for Wrightâ€" Hargreaves last vear. The chucking pi learns from strai that for the mi Duncan avenue. (Third in a series, indefinite of all, deal at Wrightâ€"Hargreaves Cof Mines League base club of surorises sm. lanches cf bass hits w neseded,} ge‘lting tsugt Kirkland Lake Team Not Yet Completed but Much Improved Over Last Year Smiths Falls Stars With ‘Hargreaves MONDAY, MAY 11TH 1936 These boys aren‘t fooling. Hays O‘Neill of Oklahoma, (left) a Yasaui of Honolulu, jab for an opening in their elimination bou United EStates national championship matches in Cleveland. T put evetything they‘ve got into the punches. is indicated by picture which shows them both going to one kn#e> in landi swings. Yasaui won the decision. THESE BOYS DON‘T "PULL" THEIR PUNCHES Harvey Graham Son Calvin Jones m 6 6 Pine Street N. Try Fhem On......And YOU‘LL WANT THEM raighnt source mine you get ries, this article All â€"Fittings verified by Xâ€"RA V You will like these Calvin Jones. Sturdy leathers. Lines that give your foot a trim look, without crowding your to>s. Snug, ankleâ€"fitting comfort. Calvin Jones Shoes are made by master craftsmen. Come in and select yaur pair from our stock of smart, new stylesâ€"the price just $5.00. lem als with °21 es, questicon, ma: seball last year, nashing out Ava when they weren *h bixaks at th ur reporter es, is . just t into from like to Bert ar . and hand piecing candiâ€" nost London Free Press:â€"One of the chief lines of attack on the Henry governâ€" ment last election was that Hydro had been drawn into politics and the muniâ€" cipalities ignored. But the present govâ€" ernmert at Queen‘s Park seems to have completely forgotten that the municiâ€" palities cwn Hydro. Two of the three ccmmissioners are cabinet ministers and Hon. T. B. McQuesten recently stated that he favoured the commission being entirely controlled by members of the legislature. MHargreaves spit nor coach has b club as yvet. To wind up the prospects T‘cmmy Tennant, once consic brightest local pitching prosp at the mine and he threw ning game last year, his c Bill Sefton, a good junior thi is a Wrightâ€"Hargreaves man Between now n°xt Friday there will iizely be news, more players perâ€" raps to be infused with the very real ‘Hargreaves spirit. Neither manager nor coach has been appointed for the Completing the Smiths Falls picturs Bob Flegg came in as a catcher and took Tennant‘s slants last year on the team which trimmed McIntyre in the final for the Journal Cup. Flegg> has taken a shot at infisld duty and there has been talk of a try for the catching services of Tel Johnston in which case Plegg could be used to advantage in the infield. Valley He‘s : Jack by Ha: third there worked out â€" town, "a fi1 , ‘Hargreavt White, Smith F ry O‘Neill, coac i fin nameq McElroy, who is playsd for Belleville in yeéear, is at ‘Hargreaves Rodney gets glowing ns from Smiths FPalls win, who held the spot All Styles Phone 11 prospects roundâ€"up, once considered the ‘hing prospect, is still he threw one winâ€" year, his only start. 1 junior thirdâ€"sacker, alls boy, is called h in the Ottawa utfield prospect." ind Fred it during hat they the odd ng their The Fight‘s On The scrap between the Canadian Amateur Hockey association and the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada will not reach a head before the fall, it is now predicted. During the summer efâ€" forts will be made to reconcile the two sport bodies but it‘s doubtful if much progress will be made. The hockey moguls spoke their collective mind by though, it has a resilience that makes it foot easy. And the even black surâ€" face is easy on the eyes. Concrete, say most tennis players, is a little hardsr on the eyes andisabntoohard for ecmfort. A sixâ€"team softball league is about all that can be conveniently played here, And it‘s about all the Porcupine can supply with good players. It‘s to be hoped everything is settled amicably before one of the best sports in the Porcupine is spoiled. Football in Sudbury Now Down in the Nickel district where spring comes a few weeks earlier than it does in the golg fields, the football schedule gets under way on Wednesâ€" day of this week. Four teams make up this year‘s league: Frood, Falconbridge, Sudbury Football club, and Sudbury "Beveragemen." Play in the league and in the five cup contests:â€"McCrea, Evans, Star, Dominion and Ontaricâ€" will be completed on August 15th. Tennis Courts L. S,. Hodnett, secretary of the Kaâ€" puskasing Tennis club, and one of the games‘ topâ€"notchers in the North is reâ€" ported in the Northern News at Kirkâ€" land Lake as saying "Our own courts are constructed of some sort of shale, or crushed rock, and are satisfactory. Timmins has dirt courts which are very good but are hard to drain. McIntyre has cinder courts which are not very good. Shale seems to provide the best all around surface, owing to the fact that rain does not affect them to any great extent." €portâ€"Ore had a talk just a short while ago with a number of tennis players who had played in a good many places. Most of them hung out for asâ€" phalt, claiming it to be best except in very hot weather when it tends to beâ€" come just little too soft. Normally, There are other members of the Grads who should be on that lineup too. The former Tuxis boys have been out practising. These are the players who have already said they‘ll try to catch positions: catchers, Bill Dunn anrngq Bert Hornby; pitchers, Newtie Lejambe, Ray and George Wallingford, Stan Hass; infielders, Tony Beaulne, Bill Twaddle, Spider McKinnon; outfielders, Dan Marshall, Stu McKinnon, Don Mortson. The scramble is on. Softball team managers in the district league have received their player certificates and are busy with fountain pens persuading last year‘s stars to sign on the dotted line. By the end of this week the lineâ€" ups shoulg be fairly well known. From what some of the players have to say, some of the managers are in for a surâ€" prise when they start the sales talk. All is by no means quiet on the softâ€" ball front. The executive decided to allow six teams within the pale and thought they knew what the six teams would be. Now it appears there is a difference of opinion about whose one of the entries is. The name is Tuxis Grads and the $15 cheque that covered the entry fee is said to belong to the Tuxis Grads too, but it appears that some verbal agreements were made beâ€" tween the representative of the Timâ€" mins juniors. It also seems that thes2 arrangements were not satisfactory to the Grads club and they want to go along on their own, claiming they have a team that will be able to hold its own in the league. (By J. F. C.) Canada is blessed or cursed with a plethora of "Special Weeks;" in the majority of instanceis, this superabunâ€" dance of special promotional periods is 'rfspcnsible for only a moderate meaâ€" sure of success in bringing topical events ang particular products to the attention of the Canadian public. Only a few "weeks" have gained and held cutstanding nationâ€"wide popularity in this wild scramble for attention. A pionser in the field is Canadian ‘ Sperts Week; a decade ago, it came into being and prosably no "week" has mads such pointed and practical progress in its effortsâ€"efforts directed to promulâ€" gating the benefits of healthful play and recreation. 1a Sb : line. ups what some prise day period has gaincd annually in inâ€" fluence and results. Fach May, the newspaper world has been a potent facâ€" tor in giving the week Dominionâ€"wide significance; many ministers, sensing that a sound body makes for a sound soul, have delivered special "Sports Week" sermons on such subjects as Because of the spontaneous public response and the yearly coâ€"operation of press, pulpit and air lanes, the sevenâ€" The week of May 24th (this year May 23 to 30) is now nationally recogniz<d as Sports Week; designed to coincide with the official opening of the sumâ€" mer sports season, it yearly focusses atâ€" tention on the fact that "It Pays to Play"â€"the slogan of the world of sport. To broadeast the truth that acâ€" tual participation in games is a preâ€" requisite of a healthy mind in a healthy body, is the primary and tundament,al purpose of this period. Week of May 23 to 30 is Sports Week in Canada Sports Week is One of the "Weeks" lncreasing in Interest,| Importance and Value. "It Pays to Play" is the Slogan. Emphasis Given to the Healthful, Moral and (ultural‘ Sides of Sport. From All Levels THE PORCUPTINET ADNDVANCE, TTMMINS ONTARIO Kirkland Lake Northern News:â€" ‘Shinese laundryman at Toronto, inâ€" terrupted by a police officer as he waded out into Lake Ontario to comâ€" mit suicide, smiled when called on to come back, and politely did so. Of course, there are no Chinese holdâ€"up men! Mail and Empire:â€"Mr. ssems to be about the most and publicizeq mister since of Mr. Gladstone. But if the other nations of the world (ard Sportâ€"Ore has more than one good authority fcor believing that the pracâ€" tice is followed on both sides of the Atlantic) are hypocritical enough to pay ‘"amateurs" on the sly, that‘s no reason why Canada should continue along the same path. Honsst citizens cannot be produced when athletic clubs (who are supposed to be cultivating fair play) insist on doâ€" ing dishonest things. How Gosod is Noranda? Ncranda promises a team in the T.B. L. southern section that will give the older Kirkland Lake teams a real run for the money. Und®r present arâ€" rangements, Kirkland clubs will pay their own expenses for games played in the Copper town, while the Quebec club will look after the expsnse of ercssing the border to Kirkland. stating quite definitely that they could see no reason why an amateur should not be paid for time lost from his job while taking part in games, if his club should desire to do that. Ang the hocâ€" key men can see no reason why proâ€" fessionals in one sport should not be permitted to mingle with amateurs in ancther. The Union men hold up their hands in horror at such a thought, and not without good reason. It seems that the whole rest of the world‘s amateur athletic unions refuse to permit payâ€" ment of "braoikgen time," nor will they allow mingling of professionals and amateurs. Canada will immediately become an outlaw, say the Union offiâ€" Clals. Interpret it how you willâ€""It Pays to Play." That will be the nation‘s slogan from Saturday, May 23rd, to Saturday, May 30th, when the 10th annual Canaâ€" dian Sports Week will mark a tribute to the true spirit of sport. of 1935 Sports Week clippings: "The value of sport to the world, the valus of sport to Canada is far from bseing fully understood even yet. A more genâ€" €ral appreciation of the many advanâ€" tages and epportunities offered, a keenâ€" ;er recognition of all that clean, wholeâ€" some contests contribute to the life of a community can only come through eduâ€" cation. Teach people to play: it matters not if it is lawn bowling or rugby, if it be on a championship team or with a "pickâ€"up scrubs‘; the hig thing isâ€" "Play"â€"and play fairly. The slogan of the sports worlq is ‘It Pays to Play‘â€" pays not only in dollars and cents, but in the gaining of qualities and stanâ€" dards which canrot be reduced to the scale of mercenary measurement." In our national life, the spirit of true sportsmanship is necessary if we are to truly prosper. It was the English writer, Trevor Wignall, who said: "Sport means nothing when it is conâ€" cerrsd only with ‘the winning of an encounter; it is a very essential inâ€" gredient of life when it prompts, in the minds of the lowliest, the stern necesâ€" sity of playing the game." ports talks, szupplementsd by shor: spct" announc:scments. Here is an example of newspaper coâ€" peraticn, taken at random from a file Schumacher Road Hyâ€"Way Service Station Nevrâ€"Nox Gasolene lue of NOT ONLY have we years of actual experâ€" ience but careful study of the newest develâ€" opments in automobile lubrication enables us to guarantee you a first class job. FOR EXAMPLE we use the CHEKâ€"CHART but if you had greased, washed and simonâ€" ized as many cars as we have, you would feel confident that you could do a good job, too system which gives the car manufacturer‘s We‘re Not Boasting #Eports," etc.; ra more noticeabl taged â€" series o be produced ire supposed insist on doâ€" Scadding emphatic the days Try The Aavance Want Advertisements Charges of Fur Poaching | |wmoveq ; to be Investigated Soon ‘ field. He ment proposes to club he took ar ing position. nearer to his hands behind prevented him hands behind the ‘Sall. This prevented him from making swing.â€" I told him to use position he had been using fo shots. He did and hit many d carried well over 200 vards. He seemed that the same sta: be used for both players he had h by tryving to makse Lew Lehr, of news reel fame, recently made a wonderful discovery, one that it would pay many golfers to repeat. He learned that he could swing much the same for both iron and wood shots. The similarity was brought out starting position he used for In playing an iron club he st00 ball cpposite his left heel, and th of the club leaning forward slig that his hands were a bit ahead ball. In this way he hit a good When he attempted to use th William Travers of Montr adian pingâ€"pong champion seen practising up for the tional championship mat Philadeluhia, in which wOop aAnNp SwWiNGS FUNPAMENTALLY _ ALIKE Distributors for Britishâ€" American Oil Products Canuck Champion lad makse myp) ent A utolene and Pennzoil Motor Oils f1C ly urprise g bit ahead of the it a good ball. to use the wosod ment employes he poaching of will be investiâ€" er Heenan anâ€" 16 use WOO ifferent start with the ba ike 1211 N1 16 A, CGAn is her 1€ pC an himsel * SAOtS. d with e shaft that )1 ’ At second base, it looks like a couple of Quins. Art will probably be out for practice when the team assembles next week and so will Jake, the newâ€" | comer. S# cent Eddi¢ Lake able af neceded Lzo Osborn will have compsetition fo the third baseman‘s place this year, i is expected. Tubman has had expsori ence at that position but one or othe cf them will have to a find a place i1 the infield. They don‘t come much better in Northern baseball when the stort stop position is under discussion than Norm Hann, the lad who wandered up here last spring from Toronto and spent a few weeks hustling at the mines. Norm didn‘t play the last part of the season last yvear because he was of the season | in lhospital for reported as fit the lanky lad than ev Norm at and although he won a couple of games last season, he doesn‘t profess to be a great hurler. Cybulski Still at First Out at first base there‘ll be Si Cyâ€" bulski again; the steadiest man in the league for that position. He‘ll be l<ftâ€" handing the ball to second and third in his double play attempts that often 11 Mcintyre Ball Club Shows Little Change in Personnel cnumacnhner ‘red Callery, bot} ral,Utility Man nly southpaw pit nd although he \t Least Two New Infielders but Pitching Staff Unchangâ€" Eddie Angrignon and Stu. Knetchel, Centre and Left Field Will Not be on Lincâ€"up. obab strict own specifications for lubricating your parâ€" ticular make of car. By following this method carefully, the proper grade of lubriâ€" cant is applied to each part and no pointâ€"ofâ€" wear can possibly be overlooked. . Leave your car in our capable hands. tre last yeal Norm Malloy rys almost a ndle the heavy side of the outfield. 11 be another unsettled season. Macâ€" ‘nmnald, Woeod, Craig and some others had a crack at the job last year rien they weren‘t busy in other spots Tup Gilbert, who had the best right l1d record in the T.BL. yast year, 11 be on the job again, andq so will ally ‘Craig, who did some relieving 1C O ach the in additi ‘e field es AdgdGamson and JOe MACUDONAail l1 at the mine, both are good hit nd both get along fine with eithe or Fred. Joe can even pitch (?) Eddie Angrignon Missing outfield is going to be minus th mnan the Macs had there last yea ie Angrignon. After a zgood man At shnOort at TT ill and the vet gain this veart en as anybody but even he was iround both the infield ang outâ€" ‘s away from the mine now and me of the spare infielders can the heavy side of the outfield, another unsettled season. Macâ€" Macs will boast the two s as they had last year. Both Adamson and Joe MacDonald zone to McIntyre‘s new perty where he‘s looking rical gadg*ts. eld was an open position the Macs. Stu. Knechtel n as anybody but even h Malloy can‘t be overlooked. He 0st any position and does a f it, despite the fact that he‘s the eldest ball player in the This year he may be having T‘oro h 16 30 The same LWO W hurling last year mine. Inky Wo . both rightâ€"hander Man Norm Mallov M lik 3@ bly Ull K11mg will rond base. Then d baseman, who ist with the St. » t e word fron lub, passed C her the Kit 30 a€ Eddi¢ batt n position last Knechtel filled 1¢ il alloy is the team boasts couple of sn‘t profess e last yeatr sood many made the ) Gast year ag honours ruvered his rbhial tent. new Mud kirs aftor work for the xi and s. Genâ€" Mary nA 1i Mcl t Three Soccer Stars \Laid Up at Mcelntyre Toburn‘s Ball Team Signs Good Pitcher infielder (who season); Dann Gordon Week three are list Lake Shore ba Tojurn â€" mine southern section Baseball league week when it Ronald (Jake) A hander of the A try in the Interâ€" for the North. According to ; Globe, Torbnto: Thomas senior tc North. The oth infielder (who a ball league, it wa ing held at the m C JC Anoped that 1: the â€"McIntyre surface and t Fom'th Thomas: senior Ball Player for Kirkland Lake Mcelntyre Operates House League Agaim Harry Phillips, who came to the Mcâ€" Intyre to play centre half this year, has just had a minor operation on his leg that will keep him out of the game at least until after the opening on May 25th. All three are reported today to be recovering nicely. MciIntyre opens the local soccer ser«â€" son on May 25th with a game against the pick of the Dome and Hollinger at the Timmins grounds. Proceeds are to go to aid the St. John Ambulance Bri= gade who have been most useful in givâ€" ing first aid to players in past years. Alex Strachan, the fill out the Macs‘ fom took his position at seen in action until hecspital following ; appendicitis. at more pital fol He won least. Charlie Dawson, Alex Straâ€" chan, and Harry Phillips Will Not Appear at Opanâ€" tough | star pl Dawsot McIint McIn Schubert Heads Softball Club at Schumacher Mine, Hope for Four Teams. ps, who came to the Mcâ€" centre half this year, has nor operation on his leg him out of the game at er the opening on May Dut ‘‘s challenge in the i of the Temiskaming was strengthened last was announced that Alexander, husky rightâ€" iylmerâ€"St. Thomas enâ€" â€"County league had left i] Dunlop Tires W1 Thomasâ€"Ayvlmer 1 l S jitche; 1¢ J ol ward NCI ione 8830 ition . minal ded C@H in Saturday‘s the fourth St. the call of the Carl Harding, d hockey last outfielder; and The last mbers of the itre, won gust. He operation n who w line whie i. auber ib ran into hree of their ip. Charte the team out n. is in hosâ€" i1@al operation. until July at PAGE FTVER n dis 1 ompsete in two from cund. m hand as ach almost over Abitiâ€" direction agalin idcdlition ct softâ€" IsNnnis, presiâ€" ident: meetâ€" 1§g is 10 n he t ‘be ‘s . in for sark ther OHN

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