Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 3 Jun 1925, 1, p. 5

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Dresses _ From All _â€"_Over Ontario For Sure Results T‘ry Our Want Ad Column The ORANGE PEKOE is extra good. Try it! "CRAFTSMEN IN AKEEPING _ THINGS__ NEW! TBE MA is good tea You have been jintending to try "Red Rose." Why not now Lefore you forget. Head Office: 249 Spadina Road â€" TORONTO Nam.ov. # *# # # #% 1 % Please send me a copy of your pamâ€" phlet, "No Matter What Happens." Address . ... . Write for booklet describing the many things awe can clean or dye, and iving prices. Ve‘ll also send a free. You hope it will. But you can make the matter absolutely certain. By means of a Confederation Life Endowment, payâ€" able at 65 years of age, you can be in the happy posiâ€" tion of complete independence of all financial cares. The cost of a guaranteed financial independence at age 65 is surprisingly small. In fact, it is not a cost at all, but a saving, and in case of your death your family will receive the full amount of the capital you would have saved if you had lived. ' The interesting booklet, "NO MATTER WHAT HAPPENS," tells all about it. Write for a copy. CONFEDERATION LIFE CLEANERS _ DYVERS It is not ordinary work or ordinary satisfacâ€" tion which prompts such enthusiastic letters. The secrset of Langley success is simple: In Mr. W. J. Fortains we have one of the most expert dyers on the continent. And in our department we have a staff trained to exzseptional standards of workmanship. and charge only our Toronto prices. Simply send your parcel to Mr. Geo. S. Langley and write aa letter saying what you have sent and what you want done. He‘ll give your order his personal supervision. In each county in Ontario are many homes which have learned the superiority of the cleaning and dyeing done in the big Langley plant in Toronto. From Gravenhurst comes a letter:; " My sister and I are highly pleased with the work you did in cleaning and repairing our dresses." From Belleville a customer writes: "I am delighted with the shade you dyed my WePay Return Shipping Charges Of Fine Fabrics, Wearing Apparel and Household Furnishingsâ€"Carpet Renovators. "I am delighted with ti crepeâ€"deâ€"chine dress." "Y‘ou excsoseded my ex as to t white p It is not tion whi The see â€"chine dress." From Bowmanyville: xcceded my expectations, especially he havy silk dress which had the sint on it." ASSOCIATION 6. C. Ward, District Manager, Cochrane, Ont. A. W. Pickering, General Agent, Timmins, Ont. Simms, Hooker Drew, Local Agts, Timmins. .......... ..... . . ..’.. .. ......’..... . oooooooooooooooooo?oooooouooooooooooooooooocoooooooooooooooooooc?oooflo #* ** %#4 i .. Now suppose one were to accept the proposition that it were possible to build a swing by stages or piecemeal as is so often done; whom would he select as a model? Would he accept Vardon, Herd or Taylor of the old school, or perhaps some one of the new school, Mitchell Hagen or Saraâ€" zen? Not any two of these players swing the club in the same way. When I say this I do not mean there are minor differences that are typical. One could not fancy swings of leading Well the same thing obtains in golf. â€" There is the preliminary waggle, and the waggle is as varied as the number of golfers, and yet there is no first class golfer living who has not some preliminary movement prior to the swing proper. ‘Mitchell‘s and Duncan‘s preliminary wind up especiâ€" ally in iron shots resem‘ble each other, but are far from duplicates. are entively indispensable, for one can mention good golfers who violate some one on more of the so called essentials. There are some points in connection with the golf swing, irrespective ~of the players‘ that seems to be univerâ€" sal. They are not many in number, and, perhaps, in the Jlast analysis, these points may legitimately be reâ€" duced to one. To badly state at this junceture this point would reflect on namey tnsa in his own there are underliyving Heretofore we have been wont to look upon a fixed head, a straight left arm, right elbow close to the side, locked hips, a straight left leg imâ€" pact, and numerous othen features as essentials, when as a matter of actuâ€" al practice, not one of these points THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO By the Brothers, Frank Thompson, present Canadian Amateur champion, and W. J. Thompson, Ontario Amateur champion and last year‘s champion of Canada. They are nativeâ€"born and resident Canadians, members of a family of five famous golfing brothers. . In the King Cup Football series, Timmins is scheduled to play at Kirkâ€" land Lake on June 6th, On June 10th, Dome plays at Timmins. On June 13th, Kirkland Lake at DBome, and on Jnne 20th Dome at Kirkland Lake. September. Days are getting shorter now, cooler the evenings. €eep the fires aâ€"burning; the year is growing old. j Frost on the tentâ€"flaps, early in the morning ; Two pairs of blankets, and stlll you are*cold. All the trembling birchâ€"leaves have turned a dirty yellow. Winter comes aâ€"stealing â€" downâ€"but now your job is done. Strike your tents and roll them tight, and paddle for the railway. White collars onee againâ€"ain‘t we got fun! On the whole the waggles of a great number of good golfers resemble each other somewhat. MBut here again I think it would be wrong to attempt to copy any one else. I think one is more or less apt to develop a proper preliimninary movement if its purpose is kept in mind and I take it that the purpose is to get the feel of the club, feel the club head is a time honored feel the club head is a time honored injuction, and anyone wishing to imâ€" prove at golf would do well to keep this saying ever before him. One can not feel the club head when the hands are tensed. Indeed to feel the club head properly, the hands must be very active and as the grip is, so is the swing. _A dead grip gives a woodâ€" en swing, a finger grip produces an elastic swing. That the feel of the club is the important thing can be The following appeared in a,yecent issue of The Toronto Mail }fBipire, signed with the initials ‘"P. G.| B. G.*" The writer, ‘‘P. G. B. G, has packed a lot of the spirit of the North Land into the verse :â€" club is the important thing can be shown in a negative way. During the cold weather one is apt to lose the touch of the club. This is, of course, because the cold numbs the fingers so that they cannot grip the clubs. ~ July. Partridge cocks are drumming, though the mating‘s done with, Drumming just for devfltr), pure and simple swank. Deepâ€"chested bullâ€"moose crdeh through the brushwood; Longâ€"limbed, unfrdml'y cows â€"clamber up the bank. Eight o‘clock; the hot sun beats on lakes of silver. Ten o‘clock, and cumulus covers half the sky. Three o‘clock: a thunder-storm, short and sharp and drenching. Five o‘clock, and sun dgamâ€"fl(kle old July. Hike throuoh the bush, through the and brule, Thick, tangled alders and stands of lotty pines, Little, unexpected lakes, bea\er-mea- dows, muskegâ€" While ever, without merey, the hot sun shines. Gone are the ‘black flies, , gone the mosquitos, Now come the yellowâ€"jackets, all full ~_of pep. Wasps‘in the syrupâ€"tin, wasps in the jamâ€"pot, Wasps in the underbrushâ€"boy, watch your step! blossom, Warm breezes carry the breath of the Spring ; Summer is coming inâ€"ho, for the Northland ! No more white collars now ; Time‘s on the wing. Up in Temiskaming all the lakes art open, All the ways are clear again, waiting your canoe (Light, lissome ‘‘pleasure model,‘‘ twentyâ€"foot freighter). All the bush is green again, callling for vou. Hell! ~you did it last yearâ€"can‘t you do it now?) Light green waterâ€"moss, sign of runâ€" ning water, Grows beside the portage (and oh! your throat is dry.) Water‘s full of wigglers, but, shucks, they give it flavor, And wiggleâ€"tails of June will be mosâ€" quitos in July. Long are the portagt strike them. Gods!â€"how the headâ€" tender brow. {On HLII‘ € l V May. and the city streets burst into top hundred pounds, not countâ€" June. portages first time you he waggles of a great golfers resemble each But here again I be wrong to attempt tra Copyrighted. ps burns the Aftera hard day HE greatest food in the world to banish fatigue is milk chocolate. That is why soldiers, arctic explorers and mountaineers always rely on it. Neilson‘s Jersey Milk is a bar of the highest quality solid milk chocolateâ€"without fruit or nuts. But such chocolate! Has a flavor entirely its own. Try one today and see why Neilson‘s Jersey Milk is the most popular bar in Canada. Look for the whiteâ€"andâ€"gold wrapper. 5¢, 10c and 25¢ sizes. Solid MilR Chocolate Weilsons Â¥Kay q iA

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