Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 14 Jul 1938, 1, p. 7

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Porcupin»e got their first tally in the fourth. The bases were loaded again with two out. Lawton‘s double, Murâ€" ray‘s walk and a single by Senese left the bags clogged. Carlo Catarello conâ€" tributed a single to left field that scored Long tiut the other three runâ€" ners were held on base. Dowling then flied out to left field to end the inning. A single by Reg. Dorey, a fielder‘s choice and a double by Romualdi that almost clearsd the fence in deep centre field, gave Hollinger their fourth and Dominic Senes> pitched his fourth straight win for the Porkies and cut the Hollinger team off with six scatâ€" tered hits and three walks. It was his cwn threeâ€"base error on an overthrow to first base in the second inning that paved the way for two of the Hollinger runs. But after his team smashed their way to the front in the sixth inning, Senese really took command of the procéeredings and in the last four frames only two Hollinger men got on base safely, one dying at second and the other at third. Hollinger had theéir big inning in the third. Dorey started by drawing a base on balls. Dean Ford dumped an attempted sacrifice down the first base line and Senese picked up the ball and threw a mile over Long‘s head at the initial sack. Dorey scored on the play and Ford pulled up at third. Johnny Oltean smashed cut a long triple into centre field to score Ford and trott»d home himself on Romualdi‘s infield out,. This splurge gave Hollinger a 3â€"0 advantage but in the following inning it looked certain that the Porkies would break into the score column when they filled the bases with one out on two hits and a walk. Abbie Moreau poked a hard ground ball to Romualdi which the latter .converted into a double play, Ford to Lawton, to retire the side. her ‘The Porcupit fourth. with two ray‘s walk the bags c tributed ; Kifs WNHO WYE the fourth in: Joe McNulty â€" Hollinger, and auring which and two runs, the sixth with lcaded. TIstrat hurler without up and on two Winners Overcome 4â€"1 Lead With Fiveâ€"Run Onslaught in Sixth Inning that Drove McNulty to Retirement. Domenic Senese Allows Six Hits to Win Fourth Straight Game This Year. Porkies Take Hollinger 6â€"4 To Regain Group Leadership Zampell Pitches Macs to 6â€"3 Win Over Hargreaves M e ces cssy cva esmm en manammares oc m se esn c on on ce acan sns e s c cce ns omm nssmc on s as es as mss apan en en e o esn on ae ol Wt csW it css e nc Ees €1I11l INYVINCIBLE and STREAMLINE THURSDAY, JULY 14TH. 1938 @ENTS 35¢ FRIDAY, JULY 15 MCINTYRE DOME BASEBALL €aimns navingy previous to was a garrisc who were t: ‘ourth innin McNulty S. Porcupine Ball Park ringing triple from the S 35¢ LADIES 25¢ " Don‘t Miss This Game" enes> pitched his fourth for the Porkies and cut r team off with six scatâ€" a three walks. It was his se error on an overthrow in the second inning that H iJillnger in senior Eu> baseball gam» it by a score of 6â€"4. orcupine undisputed leadership, the been tied on the top Monday‘s fixture. ining, Porcupir ADMISSION 2 a five Game Starts at 5.30 p.m. bat 6 12 â€" 274 5 Hollinger 030 100 000â€"4 6 5 Porecupine 000 105 000Oâ€"6 12 1 summary Errors, Romualdi 4, Senese, Ford. Struck out, by Senese 3; by McNulty 2 in 54 innings; by Istratti, 0 in 3% innings. Bases on balls, off Senese 3; off McNulty 3; off Istratti 1. Double piays, Romualdi to Ford to Lawton. Canada â€" Lumberman:â€"Courtesy is like an airâ€"cushion; there may be noâ€" thing in it but it eases our jolts wonâ€" derfully. Threeâ€"base hits, Oltean, Bean. Twoâ€" base hits, Long, Oltean. Left on bases, Porcupine 13; Hollinger 5. Umpires, Llioyd Chambers, plate; Steve Carahan bases. Catarello, 2b Dowling, 3b Labag, rf Moreau, ss Long, 1b Bean, If Murray, cf Schultz, c Senese, p Lawton, 1b Cherevaty, 3b Scarlett, cf Darragh, rf Dorey, If Ford, 2b Oltean, c . Romualdi, ss _ McNulty, p . aâ€"Thompson, 3b bâ€"McCrea, ss câ€"Istratti, p Porcupine had been giving Holling»r some tense moments in the earlier stages of the game but it was not until the fifth that they really descended on McNulty. Bean triplkd and after Murâ€" ray popped to short, Schultz singled scoring Romualdi booted a ground ball from Senese Schultz being held at second. Catarello drew a base on balls and McNulty was sent to the showers with the bases full. Dowling was the first man to face Istratti and singled to score Schiultz, leaving the bases still loaded. Babe Labag got hold of another of Istratt‘s slants for a clean single that scored Senese and Catarelâ€" lo. Dowling attempted to go to third bas> on the play on a throwâ€"in to the plate but Oltean, Hollinger catcher, reâ€" covered the ball fast enough to nip him going into the bag. Dowling and Cheâ€" revaty at third base for Hollinger, squared off in a threat to fight, Dowâ€" ling claiming that the Hollinger man had attempted to spike him. The flareâ€" up didn‘t amount to anything but Cherevaty was taken out of the game a few mniutes later by Manager Mcâ€" Innis. When the game resumed again Moreau hit to Romualdi at short and the latter fumbled the ball for his fourth error of the night. Labag scored on the play, Moreau stopping at first. At this point McCrea was sent to short for Hollinger to replace Romualdi and Long, the next batter, was thrown out at first by Thompson who had replaced Cherevaty at the hot corner. This endâ€" ed the scoring for the entire game, the Porkies hanging on to their twoâ€"run lead and regainine the group leaderâ€" ship. last run of the game in the fourth inâ€" ning. 33 4 6 c 27 aâ€"Replaced Cherevaty in sixth. bâ€"Replaced Romualdi in sixth. câ€"Replaced McNulty in sixth. Porcupine BOX SCORE Holiinger ‘‘Many persons still believe that all leftâ€"handers must be a bit eccentric. In fact, the word ‘sinister,‘ which origâ€" inally meant nothing more than ‘left, has come, through the ages, to acquir> a wholly different connotation. Only a decade ago Ring Lardner, that eminâ€" ent authority on the raising and trainâ€" ing of children, wrote a piece on the upbringing of youngluns with a tenâ€" dency to list to port. ‘Mr. Lardner, having travelled extenâ€" sively with major league baseball clubs, had observed that most leftâ€"handed pitchers were nicknamed ‘Dizzy,‘ ‘Datâ€" fy,‘ ‘Dopey,‘ or Bugs, and he considerâ€" ed that it was no mere coincidence. No dutiful parent, he asserted, would ever permit his child to grow up a southâ€" paw. "Perhaps Johnny Vander Meer has done more to set the world right about leftâ€"handers than all the psychologists and educators combined!" Southpaw the First to tDo Trick in Hundred Years In all the one hundred years of baseâ€" ball no pitcher in "organized ball" ever twirled two noâ€"hit games in the same year, let alone in the same week, and successively, as 22â€"yearâ€"old Vander Meéerâ€"a southpawâ€"did the other night. Which prompts the Chicago News into saying : Haileybury, July 14.â€"(Special to Thr Advance)â€"Further â€" consignments _ of game fish to restock waters in this district, and brought north at the reâ€" quest of the Temiskaming Fish anc Game Protective Association, have arâ€" rived here within the last few days, two truckloads of speckled trout finâ€" gerlings having been received from the provincial hatchery at North Bay. One load was deposited in Loon Lake, in the Silver Centre section and a favorâ€" ite resort for anglers, and the other divided between two trout streams on the West Road between Haileybury and the Montreal River. The little fish are between four and seven inches in length and are about a year and a half old, it was stated. Several other loads of similar fish are expected by the end of the week to complete the quota the Association asked for in speckled trout, it was intimated by Norman â€"C. Mcâ€" Vittie, the Association president, who said requests for pickerel already had been filled by the Ontario authorities. "What balm that must be to the countless millions of leftâ€"handers in this rightâ€"handed universe! ‘"Maybe the psychologists and eduâ€" cators are right. Perhaps parents of leftâ€"handed progeny are guxlty of a grievous fault when they attempt to make over their leftâ€"handed offspring and teach them to eat the nice spinach with the spoon in the right mitt instead of the left. Mcintyre To Play Porcupine . Cellar Team and Group Leaders Clash in South P o r c u pine Toâ€"morrow Night. It will beca case of the cellar against the garret when McIntyre and Porecuâ€" pine meet in a scheduled senior Temisâ€" kaming league game in South Porcuâ€" pine toâ€"morrow night. The Porkies are leading the group while the Macs have won only one league game this year. The Solomon clan will go into the heat with more confidence folâ€" lowing their win over the classy Wright Hargreaves team in Kirkland Lake yesâ€" terday and the Porcupine ball mechanâ€" ics will be well advised not to take any chances. Restocking Waters in Temiskaming District Noranda, July 12.â€"The fact is being very strongly stressed that unless chilâ€" dren have been vaccinated they will not be allowed to attend class, in the twin towns, at the opening of the fall térm. â€"Consequently Dr. O. Chabot, public health doctor and his two nurses, Mrs. P. Morency of Ville Marie and Miss Marguerite Ethier of Noranâ€" da, were kept busy on Wednesday and Thursday of last wetk. Twentyâ€"six children were vaccinated in the first day, in Noranda, and 68 the second day in Rouyn. Over and above that, 21 children were immunized in Norarâ€" da and 35 in Rouyn. The number of babies weighed and examined in Rouyn amounted to 68, and there were 47 in Noranda. Hers in the city the squirrels will flip their tails in the faces of both cats and dogs and then retire to a safe height and sneer. The cats sometimes stalk them, but they do it in a "You know I am just doing this for fun and don‘t have to do it at all‘ manner. They are even as futile as the Maple Leat sluggers. Now out on the farm selfâ€"respectâ€" ing cat woiuld take it as a personal inâ€" sult if squirrels spread themselves all over his private domain. The dogs will not even yap at them. there would be a squeal and a swirl and that would be the end of Mr. Squirrel. Ewn the farm collie wouldn‘t take it laying down. And the squirrels can‘t even get a thrill out of being chased by a city cat. They as futile as ribbon clerks in a rugby game or brokers in a ball club. Brandon Sun:â€"It‘s a shame that them that has things aren‘t always the ones that‘d appreciate them the most. H>» would stalk them as persistently as their shadow until sometime the squirrel would be just a second late; In watching these squirrels play around we realized how futile dogs and cats become when they live in the city. Must be Vaccinated to Attend School at Rouyn If they would only go a little farâ€" ther afield they could have a lot more fun and would not annoy us. It seems that an owner Oof a resâ€" taurant on the Exhibition Grounds spent considerable money fixing up criling‘ with crepe paper, etc. Maybe they then go and gnaw off the other end for all we know. In any event it looks like good clean squirrel fun and much more attractive than anything we can offer them around our humble dwelling. We hope that our squirrels hear about the sport down at Exhibition Park. The Ennis Cup game scheduled to be played here last night between Lake Shore and Hollinger, was halted before it started by a heavy thunderstorm that left the playing field a sea of mud and water. The Kirkland Lake team, who claim to be so busy helping the comâ€" pany make dividends that they could barely get away to playâ€"oh yeahnâ€" were unable to stay over and play the game toâ€"day. Both Ennis Cup games that have been scheduled for Timmins this season have been rained out, Toâ€" burn being the visitors on the previous occasion. (From Toronto Telegram) A few days ago we described some oi the fun the squirrels were having around our houses, such as gnawing branches from the trees arnd watching them sail down on the lawn. We an> also told that the squirrels happily gnaw off one end of this crepe paper, scurry off to another beam and watch the 50â€"foot streamer float slowly downward. We are told that the into hundreds of dollars Rain Stops Ennis Cup Game Here ‘ven Cats and Dogs Lose Caste in the Big Cities The luckless Hollinger football team, who have travelled through three years of campaigning without a win, almoest bok> the jinx on Tuesday night when they played McIntyre to a scoreless draw in the first game of the Foster Cup seriecs. While scoring chances were not numesrous, Hollinger had a slight edge on the play and should have scored at least one goal in the first McIntyreâ€"Goal, Brockbank; backs, McAdam and Mair; halfbacks, G. Boyd, Phillips and J. Morrison; forâ€" wards, Dunstan, Searle, Davis, Rodâ€" gers, R. Boyd; subs, Urquhart and T. Morrison. Hollinger Team Is Still Jinxed Football Squad Play Scoreâ€" less Tie With Melntyre Haven‘t Won in Three Y ears. Hollinger and Lake Shore Contest Last Night Failed to Get Under Way. Refereeâ€"*"Dick‘" Mitchell expense ran Calgary Herald:â€"The Legislatures of fortyâ€"three American states in regular sessions last year enacted 18,483 new laws. The Cleveland Plain Dealer desâ€" cribes this record as a tribute to the ingenuity of the state senators and reâ€" presentatives who from coast to coast joyously assumed the burden of regiuâ€" lating other people‘s lives. Swimming Lessons May be had by Adults Over four hundred children are now receiving the advantages of the Riverâ€" side Swimming Pool service under the supervision of Mr. A. R. Fisher. Most of these youngsters are unable to swim, but are showing unusual quickness and adaptability in learning the art. This week Mr. Fisher announces that opporâ€" tunity is also to be given to adults to learn to swim. This follows many reâ€" quests for this service. Mr. Fisher has reserved Tuesday and Thursday 2oveâ€" nings from 7 to 9 for swimming lesâ€" sons for adults. Appointments by adults for instruction in swimming may b> made at the swimming pool. Senior Baseball standings Swimming P o ol Service for Adults. W. Hargreaves Lake Shore Toburn Noranda The golf match between the Mines and the Town for the John W. Fogg Trophy, scheduled for toâ€"night has postponed until Thursday of next week, July 21st, at five o‘clock, owing to weath=r conditions. Members wishing to take part should signâ€"up on the bulletin board at the clubhcluse or get in touch with A. W. Pickering, captain. The current standing of the Tâ€"mis kaming Baseball League shows Porcu pine Miners leading the parade in th Northern section and Wright Har greaves in the South. The Porkins ar game ahead of Hollinger, with Har greaves holding the same advantag over Lake Shore. The two standinz Lre:â€" Golf Match Postponed on Account of Weather Forcupine Hollinger Mclntyre Poreupine Leads in Northâ€" ern Section and Wright Hargreaves in Southern Group. ADMISSION , FIRST SHOWING IN TIMMINS RIVERSIDE PAVILION TOâ€"MORROW NIGHT (FRIDAY) 10 NORTH GROUP SOUTH GROUP ROYAL KNIGHTS CLUB ORCHESTRA Regular Dancing Every Wednesday and Saturdayâ€"Admission T75¢ per Couple ANDY CANGIANO AND HIS ORCHESTRA 800 428 000 720 166 a fire, but added that sterner measâ€" ures would follow if the practice he complained of was persisted in by the youngsters. The fire, which did damâ€" age estimated at $75 to a Rorke aveâ€" nue house owned by Wesley Rice and occupied then by George Sasseville, apâ€" parently was calused by children playâ€" ing with matches among some shavings used to bank the building, the fire which started getting into the walls and proving a stubborn blaze to put out. Surprised by Constable Mike Scanlan on Columkus avenue last night, three Timmins youths, Jean Paul Timm, Leo Larouche and Jack McLean, were arâ€" rested on charges of theft of gasoline from a parked car. They will appear in police court on Tuesday. The members of the Timmins golf club will visit Troquois Falls this weekâ€" end and a good crowd is especially reâ€" quested to make the trip. Players wishâ€" ng to make the trip kindly signâ€"up at the club house so that cars may be arranged. The Kirkland Lake golf club will make n interâ€"club visit to the Timâ€" mins club on the week of July 24th. Halleybury, July 14â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"If children persist in their alleged habit of crowding firemen when engaged in their duties of combatting fires, it may be necessary to turn the hose on them, it is announced here by Chief Ken Watson. The chief declared that at a blaze last Friday afternoon a crowd of young folks got in the way of the brigade and refused to be chased away, despite the possible danger from sparks or falling walls. The chief said he would appeal to the parents to imâ€" press on their children the need for giving free action to firemen attending Trio Are Arrested for Stealing Gas From Car Members of Golf Club to Visit Iroquois Falls Club Superlative Hurling Gives Solomon Team 6â€"3 Revenge Local Portsider Keeps Ten Hits Well Scattered as Mc Intyre Overcome Oneâ€"Run Lead and Win Game With Three Run Splurge in Fifth. Kelly, Star Hargreaves Hurler, Taken Out in Eighth, Phreaten to Turn Hose on Children Attending Fires SWIMMING INSTRUCTIONS FOR ADULTS Riverside Swimming Pool and his Appointments may be made at the pool. at â€" _ §$1.00 PER COUPLE Kirkland Lake, Ont., July 13.â€"(Speâ€" cial to The Advance)â€"Superiative pitching by "Lefty" Zampell gave Mcâ€" Intyre a sweet revenge over Kirkland Lak>» teams as Timmins nine deâ€" feated the group leading Wrightâ€"Harâ€" greaves 6â€"3 in an Ennis Cup baseball meeting here today. Although he allowed ten hits, and his support made five errors, the portâ€" sider had enough on the ball to keep th> ~locals‘ bingles scattered. Harâ€" greaves used three men on the mound, Hal Kelly being matted out in the eighth after he allowed nine hits and five runs, and Biff Roach being reâ€" placed by a pinch hitter. Sammy Salsâ€" berg finished the game. The local nine started off with one run in the first inning and it looked like a repetition of previous McIntyre appearances here. It looked more like it in the third when the visitors began booting the ball around for three errors after scoring two runs in their half of the inning. In spite of the errors, Hargreaves could get only one run in the third and one more in the seventh, while the Macmen went to town, makâ€" ing three hits go for three runs in the fourth as Zampell tripled, and adding another in the ninth. A smart double play, Hann to Quinn to McShane, cut short a Hargreaves rally in the eighth. After the bad third inning, the McIntyre defence tighetened to sensational heights, with Prout doing some good infield work. Lineups MciIntyreâ€"Wood, rf; Prout 3b; Hann ss: MacDonald c; McShane 1b;, Sunâ€" derland If; Gilbert cf; Quinn 2b; Zamâ€" pell p. Hargreaves Blairmore Enterprise:â€"A circus reâ€" cently went broke in Edmonton,. It‘s tough work competing with parliament Wright Hargreavesâ€"Mcllroy â€" 250; Reilly 3b; Cookson ss; Ferti If; Jenâ€" nings cf; Perigoe 1b; N. Anderson cf; Schonfeldt c; Kelly p; Roach p; Salsâ€" berg p; D. Anderson p.m. there 101 000 100â€"3 10 002 300 001â€"5 10

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