Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Advance, 17 Jan 1939, p. 4

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Owen Sound Barrie Colts ` Midland . . . I Penetang . . . RI... 1' Junior " " T ' jux`/'E'14:'1L"1: Midget `IT L T Pts. I1 T ` ts,` IOWS Z 31 cm. ROONEY wms ash` 3 Cal Rooney, the Canadian heavy- on] 2 weight, outpointed Tony Arpino, in 2 London, over 10 gruelling rounds. de ! Arpino, rugiby footballer, film W mi,` actor and part-time pro'fessional th` nd. boxer, made good play with 9. ed straight left, his amateur style of Iboxing often stinging Rooney into `fierce two-handed action. Rooney `was the.- stronger hitter inside, and _3t5_ | in the last round swung a right to 3 the head, at the same time rushing 5 into his rival, who went down, but 2'|was up in a ash. The blow, how- 1 ever, weakened Arpino. I There was a tense moment in nduithe fth round when Rooney rush- -denied his opponent and with Arpino md` underneath, both nearly went over den,,the ropes and out of the ring. Arpino, who had been staggered in the rst round with a right coun- lter punch to the jaw, proved tre- lmendously strong and willing. He `skimmed Rooney's nose with a dan- n I I 1 1 I :2?-l =:e1-ous-laden right in the fourth, pt_:_`but the Canadian twice got him off , 2 his balance and caused him to fall ` 2 ' to the floor in the sixth and seventh 1 rounds. There was no count. 1` It was a good. even battle, with 0`gRoone_v finishing the stronger. 0' Jackie Stubbs, Maccleseld, l Featherweiglit pupil of Jackie Brown, gilgave away height and reacl. and gfmore than four pounds in wei:2'ht 0 in -outpointing: Skits Perry, Stock- 0 port. over six rounds." vooxlng one two-] the : st: t5_ a` riv 'lWas_ weak: v '-I , LL .. N_ ~Hi-ying Herbert is still bowling [them "' . '3? i "d`3 " PECORE scoruas THREE, WHILE Press `P" `" d f "` Dyme SCOTT STARRING AND -BOWEN " (`Cal Rooney) this week by his pal BRAWLING ' Eddie Stransman. It runs as fol-` _ ' \ - - run- -.:....,: *.m,nan.d`Rrit- EERBIE 15 Cdlts Edge Consols. to HEAl}E_-F Cellar withv6-4 Victory * Jan. ;.4u\...v iSix Midget Games ,4 Juvenile Run [on Without [iitch ll (Continued from page three) , Burton Ave.-Goa1, D. Spooner; :' defence, A. Lambert. and Jack ,Fin1-:bein~e1-; centre, A1. Brennan; iwings, .VIur1'ay and R. Goddard; all- gternates, R. Campbell and .-Mb. Central 8, Burton Ave. 1 Dint Scott's Burton Ave. boys took an 8-1 drubbing from Bus \"ick.~*` (.`,ent1'al in the opening ju- venile match. The Allandale team iced ju.~.=t :nou`_:h men to [ill out a team and by the end of the game they show- ed a decided lack of condition, 21: the fuil roster of the Central team .~.-cored almost at will. The l`.~*t period en-Ge". in :1 one- all tie. with Gosney taking Kelly's pass for the Burton gsoal and 1\'in_; .-v.-orin_<.-` on C1'eed .~' assist for Cen- tml. The second period saw the !(`en'u'uls 312111},-`i111: in for :1 total oi Hive ;'o:11.- in the period. I\'i1`1 zissisting` on the first and King on the second. 1{um.'~'a_\' followed, .<,cor- I 7 W .__:..1_ rV..,...,l .....l 1 i I i nick scored the rst two with Bird_ 2:10` at brace, with Creed and g'u1'ing' in the second counter. scored the fth on u p21.<.~` Arnott. I . >l.'\;uIIu. ur.un.~u_\' lullvvvvxn, A - ' v ,.._.I I.:. ALI... | .-\1'nuu,. y Kirkpatrick scored his third y.-'o:1l `to .'~tLa1't off the nal frame. Bird `Lzxl1ie . the eighth goal that (lid no- ithinjx but add to the Burton swamp- iin_2', Kirkpatrick and King` g;u1`ing llin the play. Burton Ave.---GoaI, Trask; de- `fence, Pyrburn and Gosney; centre, | r u . _I\ell_V'. wmgs, Clute and Fnrman. ...1 IV._..l |!nnnL. . Aafgnpn l\|1'i\puLnm\ auu .uu.u.., , .... ....., lBill Bird; wings, Ramsay and King; `alternates, Creed, Harris, Haddon, liBarth and Arnott. Trinity 5, Baptists 3 l Trinity took a second victory over Elie Baptists as their juveniles turn- ed on the heat in the second period lto score a 6-3 win. ` The first period xvas 21 battle all D the way with the Anglicans nosimz ` out 21 one-goal lead. Ranisay scored all four of the "I`rinit_\' itouls in the lfraine. Glenn and .\IlcGi.bbon g'u1'n- ered assists. Jermey scored two land had an assist on the third for Baptists. rMucD0u2;all scored one `and an assist, with LeG-ear getting 321 point on a helper. The second period saw Trinity tucking the game away as McGi~b bon scored two with Ramsay help- rm... u..:...I n...-in.-I umu :1\I:1I_\;. wings, unuu: uuu ........... `. Central--Goal, |Couch; defence, `Kirkpatrick and Dollery; centre, In:n o:...x. ...:.....n Dnmunxr and Kine-~ DOI1 SCOFEU LWU WILII J.\.U.IIAaso`v .u..,. in}: on one. The third period was i scoreless. N` ' '-W rI_-1 nnivwunt gfgyuug,` 'i Sc01'el85S. . . T1-inty-`-Goa1, Payne; A defence, F111` C` `McBride and Walker; centre, Bob `-m933i" .Ramsay; wings, -Glenn-and McGib- Tduced bon; alternates, Gosney,` Kelly, Col te1'mS ;1`rs,v.,Dyment and Smith. '. S1501`?- Owen Sound Midland Colli1\, `. Camp Borden N- JUVENILE GAMES nd ount. ~att1e, U anger. Iaccleseld, ckie \\'eig"nt 1`_\', Bmie Colts edged Mid1an-dVBrit- ish Consols toward the cellar and eliminartion in the junior -B group ' "--x ----.... no. +1.-m 1\/'[ir11nnd- Gar- eliminaition 1n me Juluux u 3.--, a fast game at the Midland Gar- dens Thursday .night. The` desper- ate nConsols were in the hunt until the third period, but the Colts turn- in a superlative effort to count twice and .hold the homesters off the sheetmg, winning u-a. VI-Iepworth, in his new glasses, was the star of the Midland piece. Despite the six goals counted against him, he turned shot after shot away ci as the Colts hit the form that car- ` ir ried them to the S.P.A. title. `V Pecore had a big night for the b Colts. Going both ways, he count- c ed three goals to lead the scoring parade. Score is given th1'ee~star 11 rating as he opened up with his t old-time passing plays to assist in '1 three goals. E The score was tied at one-all at|E the finish of the first period. At f the close of the second the score l was still deadlocked at 4-4. Bur: t Vicks, who has been counting`; goals I at the crucial stages of the games, ` scored the winning goal ve minutes .l`te1' play `began. To put the game away Pecore accepted Mohns assist to tally the nal goal of the night. Pecore scored ..rst on an assist- ? from Scott. In the second Bowen d -~ta1`ted off with a goal, with Scott I notcliinf.-` his second a.~'.~5.~"t. I,.i\'ii1g- ston wound up in his own area and went through the entire Consol team to score, capping :1 beautil'ul solo effort. Pecore was on the re- Camp Flyefs in C;-zllar After Three Games LOSE TO COLLINGWOOD, OWEN SOUND, BUT TIE MlDLAND.-E LATE IN STARTING AND MILD WEATHER BLAMED.-TI_-lOMP- , '. SON PREDICTS VICTORIES. ! l Tommy Thomp.=on ;~2 Camp Bor-i Ion Fl_\`e1's are rmly enscoiised in`. the cellar position of the inter- -netliato .-\ rzroup with only one point. The Flyers have engaged in three games, have lost to Owen` Sound and to Collingzwood and tied; ltlm i'a.~tt-.<'te1)piii1.:' .\li(llzm(i Consols. H -J. .`:,..1. Hm TF1`-m-< nh. rlon r1_\`e1's am: mm._ .....,,W..., ithe inter-' oneii in: 0\\'eu: tied;9 the '15 Friday night the F1_\'e1'.< absorbedil u one-sided 7-2 trouncingg at the- Wticks of the Shipbui1(ie1'.<, who!` moved up from the cellar with the ' win. In the gxzune .-\h>.A Kirby dlldi` Roy Brock, both star centre men with the chamiponship -Barrie Colt i ._.-zuns, were st2u's. McCo1oskey andii I .`.`2lIIIs, nun: Eb(lx.<,. ....,v,. _, V -`i_\'rc got the :.:`0a1.< for (Iump. [(3 According to coach Thompson,.t .\Ii Consols were lucky to pullf 2-Lit with zi tie, and but 1'01` the iuc`.:;1' "'01" condition the FL\'ei'.< would huveil won in reyrulation time. Starting 3 `:1te1' in the schedule than the other ;` !`.f.`2lh\S, the F1_\'e1's were faced with`: Lhe lack of ice to practice on and% have gone into their 1':ith1'Gf:|`! ----.une.: with less than a practice a week to keep them in trim. Theyl "Live not had a game on home ice_ - l Jan. 3-ct, ..... -.. -..- -.-__ ,, !The_\' will be caught up with theilQuinlin, Ivy s import, turned on the]; schedule by the 23rd, threelheat and sent his team to the front ,; teams, Collinyrwoocl, ;\I'idland andlagain with two rapid re tallies. Owen Sound, are dated to play|Ness scored for Stroud to even the here to-morrow, Friday and Mon- count, but in the dying minutes day. David skated in _to give the visitors Three Barrie -players are on the the victory margin. roster, Morry Stransman, Bus The fans are looking forward to L,torey and Garry LeGear. LeGear another meeting of these teams, is given much credit in keeping the with keen iee to Speed up -E-he p1ay_ score down in the three games the Camp have played to date. Like Les Hook, LeGear jumped into in- Annual Clearing Sale of all Cloth termediate hockey and starred with-land Fur Coats. Our entire stock out the benefit of junior experience, at real bargain prices. Buy now` although last year LeGear playediand save.. Simmons & Co. The with the Barrie C s. Hook is Coat Store. leaving shortly for England, wherei he will take a course in P.T. and will return to Camp Borden as Kl Shot) The 1 Baptists-~Goa1, King; defence,` Moth and Py|burn; cen`tre, LeGea1`;` win~gs', |MvcDouga11 and Jermey; 211-'1 ternates, McGi11icuddy, Clarke and` Irwin. I J-.._-- oz.) .c`l,:.:nm~ ?\Ynvm1 -Coats, either made to youli amgasure'of from ' `stoc1`9.'t' gre9{t1y':_ ` 'pi'ie.s. ,"f.i'beral paymen' . terms. Simmons & Co. The Coat`! ' 4 _ | k 1l'W11'l. ` Referees-~Sid Skinner, Norm Hooper, Ken Walls, Jack Walsh. owENlIvY scom: IN FINAL .AND.- MINUTE GIVES VVIN1 * *----' I ceiving end of a Scott-Bowen pass- `ing play to count his second goal.. 'Vicks was aided in scoring the fth by Bowen, and Pecore and Mohns combined for the sixth. su:.n-...:u.. ..'l.u-my T:-1: met his combined 101` me suuu. Mid1and s classy Dick met match in a bodychecking duel in the game as (Ferry drove him to the ice with a bod`y-crusher. Further excitement was provided when the I stolid Don Bowen, waiting until the nal minute of the game, smashed Havber two`nice hooking lefts, then took off his gloves and iced the hon ` ~~~- | f`.~-nu-.1 -f'nwu.~-:n'R ai Pecore, 'Picard - ---` Much comment as to the cor- rect spelling of the name of -Barrie Colts star import, Don Pecore, leads to this explana- ation. Pecore claims the cor- rect spelling as P-e-c-o-r-e, and prefers that, but when an in- `fant the records of his birth were burned and the only avail- able record was in the Prayer Book of a French-Canadian wo- man. lt was spelled Picard and his O.H.A. certicate is signed that way. provided wueu I.,ln:la55e15 Due _ ,,e ,,V_____ _, point has been missed, final we specically stated that lacrosse has ruined any other sport but 13- crosse in that town. The defence tempered Consol forward. With a | put up by the scribe does not dem- D9-il` Of S`?-C0I1dS to S0; `BOWEN '35 that . . . he merely says that iOril- l'3'~`0ll `cl m'<\.l01' l)01\i1l'C.\'- lia has been given columns of recog- l3ai':'ic C01t:`-G0&I1, Silk`. defence! nition in newspapers throughout the T1`1`Y and P800111; Cet1`s D BOW` :ountr_\', while the Barrie Colts are 911; lY11'>`, 300% and Vicki`; 31'C91`11' grettiiig only a stickful. It is not sites, '.\I0l1llS, Livingston, Palmer, V. :1 matter of publicity we are hit. B0Weny Jemletliy Roach (Sub `=."0211)- Llll_'_," at--it is the lack of interest in 31id1and British -C011S01S--G0z1l, other competitive sports. Barrio has Hepworth; defence, Dick and Willis; baseball teams every season, win or centre, Johnson; wings, Howard an. lose. The softball in Barrie and Nesbitt; alternates, Harber, Castle, the immediate district is tops. In Gilbert, Strimas and Badley. hocke-.\ we have two junior teams, n-pA..A,. f'nlHnn`a T21-:1rlf'n1`(l. one intermediate C team, six ju- T1'init_v .. .. Collier Central Eurton Ave. t. .~\nd1'e\v .< Bapti: ll 1,TH1RD PERIOD THRILLS FANS ! AS STROUD TAKES LEAD | WITH s1x RAPID FIRE GOALS. ` IVY PRESENTS NEW GOAL-1 KEEPER. . I z, ;u v-..... .... .. ,Iwou1d not be ix 1 match, due to 1 V tion. !(By our C1'ai_r_rva1e Correspondent) : In what was called an exhibition `match ztfter a few minutes of the :_.,'z1x11e had gone by, Ivy Vaple Leafs idefeated Stroud at the Stroud ice. "palac-e last week by an 11-10 score.` 1 It was decided that the ~_;-.'ame Iwould included as a reg.-gulzlr `match, the soft ice comin- ....,... Ivy opened strong` with Quentin` i'u1)pin_;` in two quick goals and Cox- ' ;worth and C. Arnold . one leach. S t1'oud s lone tally came off" Ithe stick of left winger Locke. ! , In the second period Ivy pressetl il1ar(l,.witl1 Baker, Lee, C. Scott and :Da\`i.'< skated in to give the Visito1'.< Wan eipglit-goal lead, while Lennoxr, Jancl Galloway scored one each 1'01 l"Stroud, the period ending; at 8-8. EMDBIT, DE1'lIll`d.b auu. 1.ruuu._y. Referee--Col1ing`s, Bradford. ..,..-V....., _,,, i The third period was the thriller. ;Ivy introduced a new not custodian ( in Clark. Stroud switched lines I `-and the result was most effective, ` _as Trombley, Locke and Hunter `scored two each to take the lea:i.- `|Quinlin, s the` 1 heat to front` lllagain '||Ness for to even -Eand , diand s *\\\ Fresh and Smoked Fish, Oysters, Milkfed Chickens Choice Beef and Pork Products Central Trinity Burton Bapti.~'t.~' Use your telephone to order your meat supply -~_ Q iiloun 626 I 621 TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1939. , We hasten to admit that from the point of publicity the Orillia Ter- riers are tops. But then, why shouldn't they be `.7 There has been enough money spent in bring- ing` players to the Couchiching town to warrant a return in the way of advertising. We also admit that the Champlain monument and the power plants and new lights are assets, but . . we wonder if our ,..i. L..- know .n1iat:r-Ir`, _- , (Cozitihiled from page three) nonlymigus occurred at the group of Orillin and Brnmpton, Mim- ico and Brantford lacroue play-, ers enroute to California stop/-` ped off in Chicago. Seeing the players alight at the terminal carrying _la_:roue sticks, a man walked up to Vern Steggall and said: You fellows must be the Orillia Terriers. { lbasehall teams even-_\ bwuaun, .,- hockey . veniie church teams and seven mid- gret teams, besides school leagues. In track and eld sport the interest in Barrie is much g'1`eater than in Orilliaf. our golf has 'proven to be ahead (we have two courses here), and if we are not mistaken we are tops in badminton. We have two Vstrong tennis clubs, two `bowling: ciubs, and the curlers from Barrie "I are known throughout the province. 1 All that and no mention of Col- `legiate rug`b_v and its `contributions 3LlUlIS h\4|A..nu V . _ ~ 77, ment legiate to the big-time. r\._ :; f\ .. H :nmn1~nccvp `to the big-time. 5 Quite an impressive list . . . and lwe still believe that lacrosse has ' ruined the interest in all these other i sports in Orillia, which is an enter- prisimg; jmiustrial town, with a stplenrlid Y.I\l".C.A. and other facil- ities for sponsoring most any sport I: imag`inable. Ijollar Days are Value Da_\'.~' to Save You Do11ar;<-'I`1hu1's Fri- fllay and Saturda_V. *___..j_.j____ "EEANPJNGS One-Third Off All Racquets in the above makes. QUEENS--Reg. $15.00 $ Days--Special . . . .$l0.00 neg. $0-UV nava- $ Days . . . . . . ..$3..00 Doz. Other makes at Special Prices from $2.00 Doz. Up See our window for full $ Days specials in Badminton supplies. Allrry Bros L--- Alli QR Rnvnlrl S BLUE GOOSE BIRDS Reg. $3.60 Doz. -4 ('1 nn n AI\ V11 Slazengex and Wrightaitson Badmin ton | Racquets SPECIAL 36 Hayeld St. Lung - _- I Next Games ` A11 17--Penetang at Owen Sound.` 19-Owen Sound at Midland. 20--Barrie at Penetang. St1'a_i2;Y 24-Mid1and at Penetang. Iboxlng Barrie at Owen Sound. erce Intermediate A" TIT T T D}-= IJULUCII v o n a s V _ _ Next Games 17-Owen Sound at Midlandujt` 18-Co1lingwood at C. Bordenie 20--Collingwood at O. Sound.'1l Midland at Camp Bordenqt 23--)Iid1and at Collingwood. Owen Sound at Borden. II t CHURCH LEAGUE

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