Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 10 Oct 1940, 1, p. 5

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Cros:| kicked once in the third quarâ€" ter and the Timmins reseiver, Villenâ€" euve, fumbled. The kicker, Cross, came up fast and recovered his own boot on the Timmins four yard line. On the next play Falls eleven was penalizâ€" ed ten yards for an offside. Cross pasjised but Wilkins intercepted on the one yard line. Jacklin ran the ball out ten yards and another play and a kick put the Timmins team out of danger, First completed pass of the game came when Villeneuve hurled to Moro â€"good for about twenty yards and a first down. Cross was doing the passâ€" ing for the Falls but his heaves were not as accurate as those of the Timâ€" mins fullâ€"back. Iroquois Falls threatened several times in the second quarter. Their line, man for man, was bigger and than that of the Timmins squad and they consistently made more yardage on their plunging plays. First score came when Diament kickâ€" ed at about the thirty yard line. The ball went well behind the touch line and Cross took it. The pigskin slipâ€" ped out of his hands and before he could recover about 450 pounds of Timâ€" mins team came hurtling on top of him. Harvey Jacklin, Sam Diament and Jim Clapworthy all figured in the play which netted five points for Timmins. The ball: was brought out to the 25 yard line and Diament place kicked well over the bar and between the upâ€" rights, ; Local gridders scored five points on a fumble half way through the first quarter and Diament converted for the «\xth. In the final quarter of the game Iroquois Falls scored its touch on a cutâ€"back which developed into an exâ€" tended run but failed to convert. Final and deadlocking point came in the last minute of play on a single kick from the twentyâ€"five yard line. There are three teams in the NOS,| Final five point score came when SA. rugby division this year. Last Cameron ran the ball to the thirty yard Saturday Iroquois Falls defeated Kirkâ€" line and Roy Smith took the oval on land Lake twelve to nothing in the first cutâ€"back and then came out to the game of the single schedule. Yesterâ€" side and beat the Timmins ends to rlay, at the Hollinger athietie field s2ore. Cameron tried a placeâ€"kick conâ€" Timmins High and Vocational played vert and the ball hit the cross bar and to a 6 to 6 point tie in the second bounded back. scheduled game. â€"In the final seven minutes of the Season‘s First Game Here Sees Troquois Falls Team Come from Behind in Last Quarter to Tie Up Count. Villeâ€" neuve Shines. Diament, Clapworthy and Jacklin Collaâ€" borate on First Score. Smith Scores for Falls. Kick Single Point in Last Minute Yesterday to Even Score of First Game Here THURSDAY . OCTOBER 10TH, 1940 BOWLING ACADEMY 24 MODERN ALLEYS Ph.one 2145 For Reservations 11 Balsam Street S. Timmins EVERY EVENING â€" 8 till 10 p.m. Admission 25¢ EVERY AFTERNOON 2 till 4 p.m. Admission 10e and 15¢ Every Saturday Night to the Music of HMHENRY KELNECK ROLLER SK A TINC Â¥ alls And Timmins Deadlock the First Grid Contest NAPOLEON AND UNCLE ELBY 81,.00 PER COUPLE Stepping, OUT " RIVERSIDE PAVILION You‘re Always Sure of a Good Time at the Teams: Timminsâ€"Snap, DelVilano; insides, Ellies, Welsh; middles, Clapâ€" ‘worth, Wilkins: outsides, Moro, Hokâ€" kinen; quarterâ€"back, Jacklin; halves, Kuicck, Diament; fullâ€"back, Villeneuve; uying wing, Paquette; alterantes, Ormâ€" iston, O‘Grady, Stanley, McGowan, Turcotte, Drew, ‘Burns, Wallingford, Wilkins, Wilson Barry, Hatton, Banâ€" | diero, Taylor, Gridley, Hrskewich. "What is the most outstanding film you ever saw?" wonders a critic,. Well, according to each local cinema, the public hasn‘t yet. Not until next week., â€"Montreal Star Branch 88, Canadian Legion, has issued an invitation to a banquet to be held in November, to all members; of the Ladies‘ Auxiliary. Members wishâ€" ing further particulars are asked to ‘phone Mrs. R. Hardy, president, at 1579â€"J or Mrs. W. Devine, secretary, at 962â€" W . The weekly whist drive in the tourâ€" nament conducted by the Ladies‘ Auxâ€" iliary of the Canadian Legion took place on Tuesday evening at the Legion hall, and a very enjoyable evening was spent by all present. Winners at whist were as follows:. Ladies: ist, Mrs. F. Stonehouse, 2nd, Mrs. W. Bezanson, and 3rd, Mrs. Pemberton: Gentlemen: l1st, Mrs. B. Richards (playing as gentleman), 2n-d,‘ Mr. J. Hefferman, and 3rd, Mr. R. Hardy. l Iroquois Falls: Snap, Kushner; inâ€" sides, Radek, Stables; middles, Ellsâ€" worth, â€"Turner; outsides, Dawston, Columbus; qaurterâ€"back, Shisko; halves Cross, N. Smith ; fullâ€"back, Crotin; flyâ€" ing wing, Jessop; alternates, Kiskoko, Smith, Albert Eaton, Wallace, Wolfe, Cameron, Kant. Referees: Howard Reynolds, Hugh sampsion; s« head â€" linesman, Sylvano Moro, Weekly Whist Drive of the Ladies‘ Auxitiary Timmins play was more brilliant than that of Troquois Falls but it lacked the steady, groundâ€"gaining thoroughness. The local squad can stand more pracâ€" tice but that is nQt to ks wondered at inasmuth as there is only one man on the team who has played league rugby before. Iroquois Falls is fielding a heavy, hardâ€"hitting, aggressive team and proâ€" mises to give Timmins more difficulty than any other squad this season. In the final seven minutes of the game the Iroquois Falls team started a drive which ended in the final moâ€" ment when they were within twenty yards of the Timmins touch line and Cameron was able to kick for the tyâ€" ing point. Villeneuve recseived the boot but he was smothered and the final whistle ended the game. 31112 39X . CLliL DNE *A Sb W\NJD(.N WÂ¥ Si..lt 39A.x*LA (.lm. Pr LA A4 Mc! * AY 1y Dnj SNOâ€"TIOKIÂ¥N MO LYIHHA as3CNOM Always Coming South Porcupine, Oct. 9â€"(Special to The Advance)â€"A meeting of the shareâ€" | holders of the Porcupine Curling Club took place on Oct. 8th at the rink. It was a very enthusiastic meeting. The officers and committees elected for the _coming season were:â€" ! The meeting closed with "Taps." Next Monday there will be a Badge |Night in St. Matthew‘s Hall for all Second Class Guides who wisgh to pass _ badges. â€"Curling Club Thanksgiving Turkey Shoot on from Wednesday, Oct. 9th to Saturday, Oct. 12th, in the rink, The Women‘s Curling Club will have the same privileges as last year. Ice to be made by Dec. ist, weather permitting. Membership Committeeâ€"All the exeâ€" cutive committee and Wint Adamson. Draw Committeeâ€"W. Adamson, G. Cassie, F. C. Evans. Resplution :â€" "That the Timmins Club members be invited to join this club as they will have no rink this winter. Fees as beâ€" fore with reduction for new beginners that have never belonged to any club or curled before." TIce Committeeâ€"C. Laamanen, M Shaw, R. P. Smith. House Committeeâ€"F. E. Cooper, L Cauder, A. Richardason. Hon. Presidentsâ€"W. D. Pearce and George Cole. Hon. Viceâ€"Presidentâ€"W. B. Walton. Presidentâ€"Dr. EFarl S. Somerville, 1st Viceâ€"Presidentâ€"Andrew C. Steyâ€" enson. 2nrnd Viceâ€"Prosidentâ€"Wm. G. Smith. Treasurerâ€"Frank C. Evans. Secretaryâ€"SOol,. Sky. Auditorsâ€"Wm. Fairhurst and ‘L. Bauder. Fxecutive Committeeâ€"E. Somerville, A. Stevenson, W. G. Smith, F. C. Evans, Wm. Fairhurst, Dr. R. P. Smith, Stan Blake Property Committeeâ€"F. C. Evans, W. Fairhurst, C. McInnis. | Eki Club members have been hard ‘at work these last few weeks repairing | their club house at the sand claims ‘and cutting trails in preparation for the coming season. Timmins Curlers Invited to Join Porecupine Club The Guides went to the patrol cornâ€" ers. and knitted for the Red Cross or worked on badges. Plans for our annual Hallowe‘en tea were discussed and it was to hold it on November 2. Captain Bailey called the Guides to order after which Muriel Crispin took inspection. The Guides then formed Horseshoe for the lowering of the flag. This was done by a colour party chosâ€" en from the Orchid Patrolâ€"Vivian Pezâ€" zetti, Mildred Borland and Peggy Lloyd. Groups of enthusiastic members have wielded paint brush and hammer to good effect in the club house. The outâ€" side has been painted and roofing has been laid. Inside hardwood floors are being laid and the walls and trim genâ€" erally freshened and cleaned up. The Guides of the â€"106th TODE. Company held their weekly meeting on Monday in St., Matthew‘s Hall. Trails in the gulch have been cleared and stumps and debris cut and carted away. Club officials say that they can use more help and offer a "cordial" invitation to members to go out to the club on Wednesday or Sunday afterâ€" noon and exercise themselves in the inâ€" terests of their own organization. Skiers Busy Fixing Club House, Trails for Coming Season Have Been Active With Paint Brushes and Axes Over Past Weeks. u £|_£cm|c THEEORCUPINF ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO i The baseball team and other athletes 'from the MciIntyreâ€"are holdmg a stag |party at the arena on Saturday night to benefit Callery and assist him with 't-he medical expenses he hasâ€"and will incur, After Callery left here he developed a tubercular back which incapacitated him. He has been ill for months now and it will be more months before he is able to get around again. Fred Callery, one of the McIntyre‘s mate. â€"The New Yorker staff of pitchers of last year and for es several years previous, is in Ottawa Extended Hospital at the present time in a full torso cast whith leaves only his head,! For a wager a musketry instructor arms and legs free. |drank ten bottles of stoneâ€"ginger in a After Callery left here he developed quarter of an hour. He was a fullâ€" a tubercular back which incapacitated blown sergeant when he had finishâ€" him. He has been ill for months now ed. â€"The Passing Hour Hold Stag for Benefit of Former Mclatvre Pitcher On the same card Len Wadsworth Canadian Middleweight chamâ€" picn (boxing) will meet Jack Tebo of Sudbury. Wadsworth will o in the ring 20 pounds lighter than his adversary. orry Yoathan, 203â€"004d pounds of brawn, is one of the headliners appearing on the Timmins Lions Club Boxing and Wrestling show which will be held toâ€"morrow night in the McIintyre Arena. Monoâ€" han, shown in the above pitture will meet Dynamite Joe Cox in a bestâ€"ofâ€"three falls bout with a 45 minute limit. Not in bombâ€"torn London, but at Toronto is this A. R. P. worker in an oilâ€"cloth souâ€"wester and gas mask. He illustrates the equipment to be distributed to members of the Ontario ‘"volunteer constabulary" which will be established as an auxiliary of the provincial polise for sabotage work. Equipment includés stretchers, crutchesâ€"two sizes for essontial drugs. Decontamination "after a gas attack‘" is where the sou‘wester comes in. ONTARIO®S "A. R. P." PREPARES Her Father: "And what are your prospects of promotion young man?" Her Suitor: "Excellent, sir. There‘s ncbody in the firim below me.‘‘ Montâ€" real Star. New â€" Yorker (incredulously): Anda you mean to say that in California you have 365 days of sunshine a year? Man from Los Angeles: Exactly so, sir and that‘s a mighty conservative estiâ€" mate. â€"The New Yorker By Clifford McBride Liberalâ€"Conservative Bound to go Up The killing recently of Ernst Nueller shortly after the Nazi sailor escaped from a Northern Ontario internment camp has raised a problem of jurisdicâ€" tion and procedure before the authorâ€" ities which now is being worked out. You see there s a lack of precedent and the law in its orthodoxy works strictly on the basis of precedent. No prisoner of war has ever been shot by If one desires a still more highly perfumed potion try mixing a quart of wine with half a bottle of rubbing alcohol. The results are quite unique as any member of the police force will tell you. One has an irrepressible deâ€" sire to climb things and to strike out for oneself. Too often, many Oof the consumers have found, there happens to be a citizen or a police officer in the way of one striking out. The irate reâ€" cipient may wreak vengeance upon you but don‘t worry you ‘won‘t feel itâ€" until the next morning and then you will be so sick that a few bruises and cuts won‘t matter much anyway. Extract alcohol from perfume or visaversaâ€"just wasted effort. Well what‘s new about that? Ack any "goofer" about the inebriating effects of perfumed hair tonic. Better still give him enough money to buy tottleâ€"and watch its effectâ€"on him. Don‘t try it on yourself unless you have over a period of years conditioned your stomach and system generally to withâ€" stand its effects. For that matter the same gentleman, if so he be, will very likely tell you that the experiments of the Delorme brothers are just so much wasted effort as there are much simpler methods than those they employed to get alcohol. One has only, for example, to drink enough wine. It is highly perâ€" fumed and after consumption Oof a quart or two the consumer is still more highly perfumed. Bodily processes seem to do something to bring out the full bouquet of the wine even if it is not of the best vintages. Telesphore and Joseph Delorme, twin brothers of Terrebonne, Quebec, plead» ed guilty vesterday in Montreal to charges of conspiracy, possession of a liquor still on their farm, making and selling liquor illegally and defrauding the Dominion government of $150,000 in excise duties. Mr. Justice Wilfred Lazure postponed sentence until Oct. 30. Crown Prosecutor Gerald Fauteux, K. C., said the men had developed a new process by which alcohol was exâ€" tracted from perfume. SIFTING : THE NEWS <« i The cross might have been renamed{‘ before it was returned. The Grand h Doubleâ€"Cross of the Legion of Disâ€"‘ honour might, in this specific instance, | i be a suitable description. Lions Club Show Features Wadsworth and Tebo Fight By restoring the highest of French decoratioins, the Petain government said it was making amends for an illâ€"advised action of the Reynaud government which occurred shortly before France herself capitulated to the Germans. Righting what is called a "hasty wrong" the French government anâ€" nounced from Vichy that it had reâ€" stored the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour to King Leopold IIIT of the Belgians. The cross was taken from him after the capitulation Oof Belgiumâ€" when France still thought that Nazism was a curs> rather than the blessing (if we are to believe reports emanating from the Vichy government) it now acknowledges. aalanSaate ate ate ats *sns *n ts a* ) Wadsworth to Spot Sudbury Hopeful Twenty Pounds. Wadsworth May Have Trouble But is Forced Into Heavier Weight Because of Lack of Bouts in His Own. Cox and Monak.an and Lone Wolf and Sandy () l)onnoll Provide Comic Relief. T | 000 Momorrow night‘s fight show at the FRIDAY October 11, 1940 TIMMINS LION Ringside $1.50 Boxing and Wrestling Show Moisley Ball Timmins McINTYRE Peter Jenkins vs. Maurice Lavigne Steve Belinki vs. Jimmy Fowler SUDBURYâ€"185 Ibs TIMMINSâ€"165 lbs. vÂ¥s. By Hugh Murph» 6 BAl Ladies and Children, any seat 50¢ N 1J io. sfi is «t w is Th . #, 15 P.M.â€"MeINTYRE ‘RE.\'A TIMMIN®S LIONS BOYS‘ BAND All Seats Reserved TICKETS AVAILABLE Larry Wilson‘s Schumacher MeINKTYRE A ' Peter Jenkins and Maurice Levigne, both of Timmins, will meet in one of the two preliminary bouts. These local a wrappers will fight at 126 pounds. | In the second preliminary Steve | Gelinki and Jim Fowler will tangie “ ‘heir 140 pounds each. Both these lads | are good scrappers and should provide good entertainment for the fans. L In wrestling division â€"we have fi‘)ynamite Joe Cox meeting Jerry Monahan. They will fight the besit out ‘ of the three falls with a 45 minute ‘imit. What weights these masses of ‘ muscled blubber will go into the longâ€" ‘ suffering ring at is hard to say, It is a | safe bet that they both will top the 200 mmmzes a guard while trying to escape from an Ontario prison camp before. And so, before it is decided whether or not there will be an inquéest a milâ€" itary court of inquiry will b¢e held. There will, in other words be a military inquiryto decide if a civil induiry is necessaryâ€"you take it from there, Sudbury Starâ€"Berlin says the axis is now going to strike Britain at a "vulâ€" nerable spot." The world was led to believe that was the objective of the air raids launched two months ago. ‘"‘Things have come to a pretty pass." Whether or not Wadsworth can give away as much poundage as he is to Tebo is debatable. It appears though that he can‘t get a fight in his own weight and so is forced to go into anâ€" other class, He may find the going plenty tough when he comes up against the big Sudbury man who oncse was a sparring partner for Joe Louis, world‘s heavyweight champion. % pound mark. Second grunt and groan contest will be between the Lone Wolf{ who wolfs around the ring with a mask on his pan and Sandy O‘Donnell. A thirty minute limit bas been placed on this fight perhaps because 30 minutes of the treatment ~these two grimacing exâ€" perts usually dish out is enough for the boards in any ring. Len Wadsworth, Timmins, Canadian middleweight champion, will spot Jack Tebo, of Sudbury, twenty pounds when he goes under the ropes withy him in a title bout. Wadsworth will fight at no more than 165 pounds and Tébo will go 185 at least. There will be a series of amateur bouts from seven o‘clock until 7:50 p. m. Any person who wants to come early will be able to see these local simonâ€" pures working out. The Id.olxlty're band and .the Timâ€" mins boys band will be in attendance, McIintyre Arena will see three boxing bouts and two wrestling matches on the main card with a flock of amateur bouts thrown in for thoss who arrive early. The Timmins Lions Club is sponsorâ€" ing the show and all of the profits accruing from it, if any, will be used in th> work of the Lions Club and in war work generally. Evening Afternoon Dynamite Joe Cox Sandy O‘Donnell Every day this week except Friday 2 Fallsâ€"45 Minute Limit McINTYRE COMMUNITY BUILDING 30 Minute Limit Grant Byerlay South Poreupine 2.00 p.m..â€" 4.00 p.m. 8.15 p.m..â€"10.15 p.m.

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