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N'I hen Halloween "me Come: around I f! b‘ ï¬ï¬fém'" Store Fixtures RAILWAY SERVING All a, Iorogtg, Hamilton, Brantford‘ Kitchen Cabinets 7" The International Limited endable daily service between and Chicago for more than 50 OAK RIDGES spend most of your life. Therefore, you want ev- erything, including your plumbing, as perfect as possible. We are ever at your service in case of emergency. Call us any time of night or day. Hurry! You home is where you TEN PROVINCES Sash General Woodworking IS Kin: 651122 Hurry! KING 65R22 The Black Panther took the sec- ond fall. He had been writhing for a while in the grip of a double-leg lock. but he escaped from this by crawling under the ropes. This time his noggin knocks showed some promise and he used them eflec- The Black Panther ï¬nally met with some tough opposition to his career of ring villiany in the semi- ï¬nal of the evening. Angus Scott of Hamilton, a younger brother of George Scott, and scaling in at 230 pounds, gave his nibs something he won‘t forget for some time to come. Right from the bell. Scott opened with a steady barrage of drop kicks which rendered unto the Black Panther no little discomfort. In fact he didn’t like it one bit. He did get in a few love-taps with his shorn cranium. but a further suc- cession of piston-like drop kicks‘ softened him up for a top-spread and pin. l Greenï¬eld opened the third fall with a body scissors. then kicked Orlando to the cement twice. 0r- lando crawled back in the third time and caught Joe with a shoul- der in the chest, then a pair of drop kicks. He scraped Joe’s eyes along the ropes. then stopped to yell at the crowd. Greenï¬eld jumped at the opportunity and slammed on his body scissors. Or- lando countered with a leg split. broken by the referee, then used a shoulder stand in the ropes to pin Joefor the fall and the match. Greenï¬eld retaliated by clamp- ing on a head scissors and pound- ing Al’s head up and down on the mat until his face resembled a contour map of Nagasaki after the atom bomb. Then he changed to a body scissors and squeezed a sub- mission from the thoroughly jell- ied Orlando; The second fall was slightly on the rough side. Orlando caught Greenï¬eld in a shoulder stand and leg-lock, but Joe wiggled out of it at the eleventh hour and clamped on his cross-body scissors. 0r- lando got out of this by biting him in the arm. By Quintin Wight Well the main event got off to a ï¬ne start as usual. Orlando appear- ed in the ring with both wrist and knee taped, and when Don George, who had accompanied Joe “Scis‘ sors†Greenï¬eld to the ring ob- jected, Al let him have a ï¬st in the teeth. Both were subdued after much struggle, and the bout prop- er began. Greenï¬eld had a tough time of it for the ï¬rst few minutes till Orlando hit his hand, Green- ï¬eld promptly recovered enough energy to remove several chunks of the Orlando epidermis with his own choppers. He was having things his own way for a while un- til Orlando managed to get his tape into use and got in a few licks of his own. Atop spread by Cr- lando spelled the end of Green- ï¬eld then and there. (At this point a ï¬ght broke out in the stands and was quelled with great difficulty); Al Orlando Takes Main Bout Amid Audience Free-For-AII Elia 18 Maple 18 Concord 18 Hope 18 Downsview 18 Vellore 18 14 3 14 4 12 6 511 512 018 1 0 1 0 With the closing of the regula- tion games, play-off games will commence on Thursday night with Concord at Elia for the ï¬rst game, with Hope or Downsview at Maple Preliminaries Disqualiï¬ed Vaughan 8. Dist. Softball League Here is a test that you can use to ï¬nd out which of your eyes does the sighting for you. Reach out with an arm and point with your index ï¬nger toward an object 15 to 20 feet away, keeping both eyes open as you get your index ï¬nger pointing directly at this object. Then, when you have lined it up. .close one eye and take a look. Then close the other eye and take a look. You will ï¬nd that when you close one of your eyes your ï¬nger remains pointed at the tar- get but when you close the other eye you will ï¬nd that you are far from lining up the target, some< times being as much as 5 or 6 in- ches off the mark. Remember, make this test right away and ï¬nd out which of your eyes is your “sighting†eye and then make sure you give it a perfect view of the ball when you are up at the plate. This is one sure way to improve your hitting. Improve Your Starting Technique There is little doub_t, now tï¬al; conclusive tests have proved it so, When we are looking at some- thing we automatically line it up with either one of our eyes. This eye does the work of sighting or aiming our vision. For example, when a baseball is thrown at us one of our eyes does the job of lining it up. Both eyes are in use at this time but only the one that nature intended to do that particular job is "sighting" the ball. It is very important that a ball player ï¬nd out for sure which of his eyes is the one he “sights†or lines up with because if he is a right hand- ed hitter and his sighting eye is his right one, he will have to make sure he turns his face squarely to- ward the pitcher during his batting stance so that his sighting eye can come into play. If he doesn’t turn ‘his head in this way, he would pro- bably not get as good a view of the ball as he should and his hitting,j of course would suffer. TEAMS’ STANDING. JULY 16 . P W L T Pts Ilia aaple Zoncord [ope )ownsview 18 18 18 18 18 14 14 12 5 29 28 24 12 11 Which Eye Is Your Sighting Eye? The Sports Clinic DISTRICT 3mm mews; PWL 18 18 18 18 18 14 14 12 5 11 5 12 0 18 03h“ OHNGOHI-j An Ofï¬cial Department of Sports College Conducted by Lloyd Perclvnl Markham Buttonville Thornhill Rich'd Hill Unionville Stouï¬ville Peaches League play-offs were discussed and set at best of 5 for the semi- ï¬nal rounds and 4 out of 7 for the ï¬nals. . League Standing up to July 14: P W L T Pts. Markham 17 13 2 2 28 Buttonville 16 12 1 3 27 Thornhill 16 11 2 3 25 Regarding the withdrawal of Woodbridge from the league, it was decided that all games con- cerning the team would be consid- ered default and two points would be awarded to the team concerned. The protest lodged by Stouffville concerning a mid-May game was thoroughly considered and sus- tained. The protest arose when the plate umpire over-ruled the base umpire to cost Stouï¬â€˜ville a run which resulted in Buttonville winning the game 11-10. The members present at the meeting decided to allow Stouffville the run making the ï¬nal score of the game 11-11. This gives Stouflville an extra point in the standing. l 7 The executive and representa- tives of the Markham township Softball League held a meeting re- cently to consider several import- ant developments in the league operations. When the bell rang for the third round, the Black Panther made a wild dash for Scott and wound up 'in a heap in the corner when the .wily fella ducked. He did manage ’later to get a leg split on Angus =but Scott took it rapidly. As the going got hotter, the Panther seized a golden opportunity and tossed Scott out on his ear on the cement. Then he jumped down himself and procedded to pound him around. This was the time for the fans to get in the act, and they did. After unravelling the end products, the decision was ~â€" both disqualiï¬ed, the bout a draw. The ï¬rst preliminary was won by Ernie Houston, another old timer. who pinned William Bauer with a double reverse bar arm. ___-r__, a past World’s Middle and Welter- weight champion and a past mas- ter at the art of villiany mangled Antonio Rocci in a most enticing way, then ï¬nished him off with a back neck twist. Markham Softball League Exec. Meets The seEond pr'elirriixiiry brougï¬t; Juan LopegplbgflArena. Lopez, tively to stun Scott while be ap- plied a shoulder stand (with the help of the centre rope). Moreover the creed of the referee â€"â€" hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil â€" Won out and he gave the fall to hismlibony majesty. With the closing of the regular season, Harold Dament. president of the League would like to thank all fans and spectators for the wonderful support they have given the teams, and hope they will in- crease in numbers as the play-0113s commence. for the second. unless Maple makes ï¬rst place and Concord second. The semi-ï¬nal series will be a 3 out of 5 games win with ï¬nals being four wins out of seven. It is wise to wait until you are fairly well recovered (an hour at least after activity has stopped) be- fore you eat heavily. Otherwise sufficient blood will not have re- turned to your stomach to do a good digestive job. Also remem- ber that digestion takes blood that must be brought from other parts of the body and this causes the heart to work even harder than it already is doing. This is why your heart always beats faster after a heavy meal. Take a tip, and give your body a chance to recover be- fore you down that heavy meal. By joining Sports College you become eligible to receive all the Sports College services which include the series of in- struction bulletins, the Re- search Guide, published every month and many other help- ful services invaluable to the athlete, coach or leader and the individual interested in ï¬tness of any kind. Member. ship is free, anyone can join and there are divisions for all ages. To join just send us a note saying you’d like to be- come a member â€" that’s all you do. Send your letter to: Sports College, Box 99. Tor- The best type of start to utilize this foot force is a medium foot spread with feet 10 to 16 inches apart. with the buttocks three or four inches above the shoulders. After Activity Meal that the most important factor in starting technique is to gain the maximum propulsion from the blocks by exerting maximum, ex- plosive pressure with both feet against the blocks, rather than con- centrating on getting away from the blocks as quickly as possible with- out em’phasizing any real drive. Although the initial start is delay- ed slightly the dividends in the force of extra momentum more than make up for the time lag at the gun. onto 1, Ontario. Winter quarters for the Thur- ner stables are also close to Oak Ridges. W. Thurner purchased the farm formerly owned by Archie Monkman on the second of Whit- church some four years ago. and his horses are wintered there. Up on Calandria in the seventh race, the official result was delay- ed while officials viewed a ï¬lm to determine the winner. Calandria was the long shot of the afternoon. Riding the same horse in the eighth race on Saturday. Johnny also came in ï¬rst. Two ï¬rsts in one week for this young jockey, whose home is in Oak Ridges. Johnny LoPatriello. 18 year old son of C. LoPatriello. CFRB side- road, who has been an apprentice rider for the Turner stables. rode his ï¬rst winner at the Fort Erie tracks last week. One thing is sure, he’ll be there every evening at 8.30 pm. unless something unforseen stops him. S-o-o, if he can return to his steady point-grabbing pace in the near future, Bill will be very much in evidence when they’re dishing out the moolah every Wednesday and Saturday night at the No. '7 highway track, two miles west of Dufferin St. Nevertheless, don’t rule Halle- han out of the $1,000 Carling tro- phy race â€"- yet. He’s recovered before from some hazardous ex- periences that include rolling over ï¬ve times, running off a track into a riyer from which he had to wade as well as having his car catch ï¬re. Take the case of Pinecrest Speed- way’s Jim Hallehan, the 23-year-old Etobicoke driver who was cutting quite a swath at the No. 7 highway track not too many weeks ago. Jim was second, third and fourth in the ï¬rst four feature meets at Pinecrest and then won the 20- lapper of June 6. However, either the rest of the ï¬eld has begun to catch up on Hallehan or his recent crackup has caused his buggy to act up. Whichever it is, the three-yearl veteran of driving all over Ontario, hasn't ï¬nished ‘in the money’ in a feature for quite some time. His No. 33 was here, there and every- where until it flipped over in mid- air and landed on its back a month ago. “The competition’s getting keen- er all the timeâ€, was the way of- ï¬cial scorer Mal Sinclair explained it the other night. “Drivers who found it easy to win early in the season are learning the other cars are getting faster." The fortunes of stock car drivers can change almost as quickly as those of baseball pitchers. One week they can be unbeatable and the next can’t grab a victory for love or money. 18 Year Old Rides First Winner Etobicoke Driver Out To Break His Losing Streak Mrs. Morrison who plays for the sheer love of sport says that at 53, she feels as spry as she did 30 years ago and adds that she hopes to continue in her favourite sport for the next 20 years. Bill Morrison, well-known local coach and umpire is managing the Elgin telam in the Markham Soft- ball League this year and has seen his wife’s famous curve ball help to bring the team into second place in the Markham league. a game. She was with the Maple and Thornhill teams before join- ing Elgln Mills 10 years ago. Base- ball has become a family affair with Mrs. Morrison, daughter Es- ther Topp and three nieces wear- ing the Elgin ladies’ team colours. And when it comes to the men’s games at the end of the scheduled games, husband Bill and son-in- law Jack Topp know a few tricks too. i ' The Elgin’s star pitcher started' her career back in 1915 at Hope when she and her sister Effie used ; to walk as far as 10 miles to play r Seen above is Mrs. Rena Morri- son with her daughter Esther and husband Bill, all well known in the Richmond Hill district for their interest in Softball. Mrs. Morrison has been pitching for ball games for the past 38 years and as any- one who follows the Elgin Mills ball team activities will vouch, when Mrs. Morrison steps up on the mound, the opposing batters can expect a run for their money. Pitcher For 38 Years a 'â€" r mmmruenh‘hund‘m" mm mm!†Shawn†SMN GRRTHANWE The Liberal Ofï¬ce Young man to learn the printing trade. - APPLY WANTED Weak, Thurs. plus “The Golden Hawk†| KUA 1’ 522233 flurday Matinee 2.00 pm. 2 Shows Nightly 7 & 9 p.m STERLING HAYDEN WENDELL C4 RHONDA FLEMING VERA RALS LAST COMPLETE SHOW 8.30 pm. with SUSAN HAYWARD & ROBERT MITCHUM RICHMOND HILL Ringside $1.00 General 650 Children 25c Richmond Hill Arena Tue., July 28 8‘30 M .P4 ROXY TITLE BOUT (In Technicolor) Monday & Tuesday â€" July 27 & 28 THE WILDEST PICTURE ON EARTH THURS., FRI., SAT. â€" JULY 23, 24, 25 STILL THREE DAYS TO SEE THIS UNFORGETTABLE PICTURE “God BlessEverubodu' ,,,:'i"i"9 JOHN BEAl “The Lusty Men†THE PICTURE THAT SAYS MANGOTICH PANTHER vs FAREWELL LOPEZ vs GREENFIELD DUBOIS vs GEORGE ORLANDO Middleweight Champion VS THE LIBERAL. Richmond Hill. Thursday, July FREE PARKING Challenger Be: ONTARIO PLUMBING REGULATIONS in York County Health Unit Write to â€" Medical Officer of Health York County Health Unit 126 Main St., Newmarket who only a name . . “Wild Blue Yonder" believe: with someone you love very, very much . . . Applications will be received for position of PLUMBING INSPECTOR WENDELL COREY VERA RALSTON has With July 29, 30 dream one man a picture for every man for every woman who A picture M shore 28; 1958 7