Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 26 Nov 1931, 1, p. 7

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mexxmxmxx Wfim 55 Third Avenue Specializing In Collect!“ of Book Accounts Private Debts Rents, Etc. Mortgages For Sure Results Try a Classified Ad. 7 Reed Block Phone 610 I 0.000 0000000000000000000000000000000 0 0900000 0000000000000 0.0030000000000000 00000000000000000000000000 000... 00 00 00000.0 00000000000900000000000000000 “00000 0 0 O. .0... 0.0.0.0....‘OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOC. . 00000000303000uI3000 0303030303080‘03030303o30:0:ozo3o3ozo3o:oooo3o00?.000303.00.30803030303VON‘VO05000’096V’I2 COLLECTION DEPARTMENT Moderate Bates and Prompt Settlements For Information Call at District Agent: THE CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE CO. PHONE 120 Our stock of used cars is present car to apply on either immediate or later To and from your home. hospital or trains, and to all parts of the Porcupine camp. Superior equipment and service at a price within reach of all. Limousine Am bulance PHONES 27 and 509 Insurance Claims WALKER DALTON Umperial Motor Sales Prompt Service Day or Night Sundays and Holidays USED CARS WANTED EUNERAL DIRECTOR OPEN.DAY AND NIGHT . T. WALKER ’10“Reed Block, Timmins INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES A1 Service Guaranteed is very low. See us for an allowance on your n NEW CHRYSLER AND DE SOTOS for at delivery. Preference given to used Chryslers . HEPBURN TIMMINS Picton Gazetteâ€"Will the wink c‘ome back? Those saucy blllycock huts hue taken women back to the style of over half a century ago. and the question now is will they obflng back that saucier wink of the sweet ladies of our grandmother's day. which the the ball 0 ng now has a.football team. which ggests a moving-picture mum in alch the great fox-wand passer hurls .e ball over the prison walls and it later discovered that the hero is .ncealed in the ball. Man and EmplteIâ€"Sins Timmins TIMMINS o: oo oo oo o. oo oo 0...” O. O. O. 0. O. CO .0..” .00. O. O... .0 O O O. O O O. O 0 .0 O .0 32‘ “President D. Sutherland and W. A. EThompson, secretary- Mtreasurer will re- :present the NMOHA at the OHHA an- nual in Toronto on Saturday. They have been delegated to approach the parent organization on the matter of including N.O.HA. omcials on the board of referees for the annual pro- vincial playdowns. This question was debated at considerable length at the N.OH.A. annual and a decision made to have the delegates seek a better ar- rangement with the DEA. . N .0.H.A. Appoints Group Convenors The annual meeting of the Northern Ontario Hockey Association started plans for a his season of hockey in the North. The report of the annual meet- ing of the NORA. as given by The North Bay Nugget is as follows:â€" “The appointment of group conven- era by the executive at a meeting held subsequently to the annual meeting here on Saturday completed prepara- tions for this year’s activities under the banner of the Northern Ontario Hoc- key Association. The appointees will proceed immediately with the organi- zation of their respective divisions and be prepared to report at an executive meeting slated for the first week in December. This gathering will be for the particular purpose of approving oi’ groupings. schedules and the scan- ning of applications for players certifi- cates. Annual Meeting Decides to Consider Group Schedules and Players Certificates at Meeting of Execn‘zive in December. “J. H. McDonald, Sault Ste. Marie. and D. R. Mitchell, Sudbury. will weld the southern group forces together. The Central group will be looked after by D. Sutherland. Haileybury and C. Binkley, New Liskeard, while D. M. Briden. Kirkland Lake and Mr. Rich- ards, South Porcupine have been en- trusted with organizing plans for the nothern division. “Kirkland Lake will operate a juniox ‘ team under the auSpices of the Cana- dian Legion, and according to views expressed by the club delegates at the N.O.H.A. annual, they will this year make a bold bid for the Copeland Cup. Junior teams will also operate in Lis- kéard, Haileybury and Cobalt, but the outlook for junior hockey north of Swastika is rather dismal. Timmins. Iroquois Falls and Monteith academy are apparently on the cuts in so far “The southern group looks like a twosome arrangement in the junior division with Sudbury and Sault Ste. Marie as the contenders. Applications made by North Bay and Chapleau for byes are to be considered by the exe- cutive and their acceptance or rejec- tion will likely depend on the findings of the conveners. The senior activi- ties will be confined to the Nickel Belt group with the winner emerging as 1. candidate for association honours un- less Sault Ste. Marie elects to enter a team. “New Liskeard, Haileybury and Co-‘ balt are again likely to compose the central section with all three clubs' entering teams in the senior and junior divisions. The northern branch will contain a large number of widespread clubs, reaching from Noranda, Que, and Kirkland Lake to Kapuskasing and Smooth Rock Falls. The outlook is for an all-season senior group in the Por- cupine area with South Porcupine and Timmins as the contestants and the Mattagami group, consisting of Kap- uskasing, Smooth Rock Falls and Cochrane hold a bye. Tentative plans call for the operation of local senior groups in Kirkland Lake and Noranda, Que, with each holding byes in the Central group. It is probable that ar- rangements will be made to have the" winners in these local groups declare a winner before emerging to meet the winners in the Liskeard-Haileybury- Cobalt triune. as jurlior hockey is concerned. In fact Iroquois Falls and Monteith appear unlikely to dabble in hockey in an or- ganized way. “The intentions of the Mattagami League, Kapuskasing, Smooth Rock Falls and Cochrane, are so far indefinite other than for the fact that Kapuskas- ing has renewed its N.OHA. member- ship and applied for consideration in the playdowns on a bye basis. that may be adopted by the O. H. A‘. this year It was ruled that since the Northern Association is amenable to the OHA in the matter of playing regulations it would be only right to have the code kept up with develop- ments. "The 1932 annual meeting will, consi- der 3. recommendation made by H. P. Charlton, Sudbury, life member that the executive be increased by adding second and third vice-presidents and extending the tenure of the executive committee members to two years as is usually the case with chair officers. Mr. Charlton, who was the first sec- retary-treasurer of the association claims the governing body as now com- _ In commenting on the N.O.H.A. meeting “Observer" who writes the “Sportology” column for The Nugget. says:â€" “Had it not been that a majority of the voting delegates at the annual con- clave of the Northern Ontario Hockey Association heeded the counsel of exe- cutive heads the organization might now be dismembered to a destructive degree. A plea set up by the Sudbury delegates for the denial of a bye in the Southern junior group to the Chapleau Club brought on a debate which came near to being terminated by an enact- ment which would have meant the ex- THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO puiaion of all clubs holding byes. Had it come to pass Kapuskasing. Kirkland Lake. Cochrane, Monteith Academy. North Bay. Chapleau and the newest member. Noranda. Que, would have been cast out. The delegates reasoned that if it was good for one it was good for all and North Bay came in for a number of hard and deserved digs. Fortunately. the delegates consented to referring the question to the executive with power to act. No doubt they will arrive at an acceptable decision. While 1it was wisdom to handle the matter l cautiously this year it will not do to go on from year to year granting old| and new byes. Eventually it will mean that the association will be reduced to; nothing more or less than a union of1 a number of city leagues with a play-I down series during the tail end of the season. Inter-club competitions will become a thing of the past and interest will wane year by year until more thought is given to the welfare of the league units than to the security 01‘ the association. The executive should this year busy itself at trying to re-build the groups. North Bay should be told that it must be in on an allâ€"season basis or out entirely. The same should apply to Kirkland Lake and other centres within the radius of an Operating group. The only alternative is to make the centres seeking byes enroll their entire group and let the winning team come out for the play- downs Imagine allowing a town to pick a team for the finals from a five or six team group to meet a club with a roster of ten or twelve players. It. may not seem dangerous at this time but there's worry and trouble ahead unless control and complete control, is exercised. North Bay has had three ,or four years to get out of the bye class. Quite long enough. Kirkland Lake lshould not be entitled to a bye unde iexisting conditions.” Another comment by “Observer” 1n the “Sportology” column reads as fol- lows:â€" “New blood, represented- in ROger Mit- chell. Sudbury and D. M. Briden, Kirk- land Lake. was injected into the gov- erning body of the Northern Ontario Hockey Association. Both have been identified with hockey from their cra- dle days and have been active in Nor- thern hockey circles for many-years. Mr. Mitchell graduated from the presi- dency of the Nickel Belt League this year while Mr. Briden is one of the men behind the game in the Kirkland Lake district. Aside with being pos- sessed of unusual executive ability, both are practical hockey men. having played the game and in recent years kept their hands in by means of re- fereeing. Their election meant the eli- mination of T. J. Faught, late of Chap- leau and now of Sudbury, which will be generally regretted. There isn’t a doubt but that the delegates were influenced in the voting by the fact that Mr. MATINEE DAILY AT 2.30 P.M. Eveningâ€"7.00 p.m. (continuous performance) GOLPI..I§LMDS Cor'nplete Change of Programme Every MONDAY WEDNESDAY FRIDA}: 95c plus taxâ€"$1.00 $1.40 plus taxâ€"$1.50 BARGAIN PRICES FOR MATINEE THURSDAYâ€"4.15 RM. Adultsâ€"$1.00 Childrenâ€"25c Seat sale now open at The Goldfields Drug Co. FRIDAY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27â€"28 GLORIA SWANSON in WITH BEN LYON and ARTHUR LAKE A sparking drama in brilliant settings, with witty dialogue pre- sented by a celebrated cast {A DeSylva, Brown and Henderson Cartoonâ€"“FLY GUY” FOX MOVIETONE NEWS Midnight Show Sunday, Nov. 29thâ€"Showing above programme WITH IRENE DELROY. JACK WRITING, BRAMWELL FLETCHER, JOHN SAINPOLIS and FRANK McHUGH A thrilling love story of the sples of the world war. Comedyâ€"“CHASING TROUBLE” Actâ€"“THE SHIP’S CONCERT” PARAMOUNT SOUND NEWS WEDNES. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9â€"3 ,A-__ ___â€" ‘A A- l WITH CHAS. “CHIC” SALE, DICKEY MOORE. FRANCES STARR. GRANT MITCHELL, RALPH lNCE. SALLY BLAINE, and ROBERT ELLIOTT. It will make your blood tingle. start your tears and stop them with uproarlous laughter. Special Added Attraction SLIM SUMMERVILLE in “FIRST TO FIGHT” (This is a Feature in Itself) WEDNES. THURS. NOVEMBER 25â€"26 T H E D U M B E L L S With PHILLIPS HOLMES. SYLVIA SIDNEY and FRANCES DEE Cartoonâ€"“OLD APPLE SAUCE” FOX MOVIE’I‘ONE NEWS Midnight Show, Friday, Dec. 4th at 11.30 p.m. Special Midnight Show. Sunday. Dec. Gibâ€"preview showing of “THE BIRTH OF A NATION"â€"(In Sound) COMING ATTRACTIONS}: MONDAY TUESDAY. NOV. 30â€"DEC. “MEN OF THE SKY” JAIN-AMERICAN TRAGEDY” MUSICAL COMEDYâ€"STAGE PRESENTATION ’“ THE STAR WITNESS” DEC. DEC. DEC. DEC. One Performance nightly at 8.30 p.m. sharp PRICES TO SUIT ALL ; taxâ€"$1.00 $1. 40 plus _t_axâ€"-â€"$l .50 "V‘WA'S YOU WERE ” 7â€" 8â€"“THE BIRTH OF A NATION” 9â€"10â€"â€"“MOTHER'S CRY" 11â€"12-“BAD GIRL” liâ€"lSâ€"“THE BAT WHISPEBS" “ INDISCREET ” PATROL WAGON AS SLEEPING ‘ ACCOMMODATION QUARTERS On several recent occasions transients have been routed out of railroad cars and other places where they have elect- ed to find shelter for sleep. Often with the police patron wagon standing out in front of the police station or at the' side of 'the building there has beeni temptation to think that the wagon' would be an ideal place for the trans- ient to creep in for a little sleep with- out disturbance. He could slip in.with- out being noticed. He would be out of the wind and would have a consider- able amount of shelter and some warmth. He could stretch out more luxuriously than in the most of the other places selected. He might not be disturbed at all. and even if he were found he would simply be transferred to another sheltered spot. “a cloistered cell." to use the words of the poet. Up . to date in Timmins. however. no one has :chosen the “blue Mary" as a resting: gpiace. All the transients have taken {the old places. stables. railroad cars. louthouses, etc.. the places used forl lcenturies by the side-door pullman' |travelling man. There has been no' originality about it. Probably the man !with the originality and spirit of pro-. |gress and adventure necessary to pick ‘on a patrol wagon for his homeless ‘nap. would not be out of the work or ‘ on the road. At Ottawa the other day. however. a transient did pick on a pa~ trol wagon. He overdid the originality ; of the scheme, however, by picking thei lmiddle of the day for his nap and go- ‘ ing inside the 'police garage to get into i the patrol. When the police had a ; call and took out the patrol wagon their {surprise must have been considerable lwhen upon unloading they discovered two men where they had only picked up one. This particular transient at Ot- i tawa was charged with being drunk and ‘sentenced to three days in jail. With ‘ the usual lack of romance and imagin- iation the authorities believed this transient to be drunk. “He must be drunk,” would be the way they would 'argue, “or he could not have crawled into the patrol wagon." Why not give .the man credit for originality, imagin- l ation, ingenuity and adventure. Faught will this year be more or less inactive in hockey circles. He was responsible ffor the birth of the Chap- leau Club as an N.O.H.A. unit and had he remain-ed there would, no doubt, have had the club still active in the Southern junior group. E. M. Little, the other retiring member, expressed a desire to be relieved because his position as assistant manager of the Abitibi P. and P. 00., plant at Iroquois Falls requires all his time." Brampton Conservatorzâ€"Ghandi has witnessed the British method of set- ting its house in order. Production- In the Commercial bowling league the ,leading five averages for the first fif- teen games arezâ€"T. Whitney. The Ad vane-e team, 222; C. Alton, T N. 0.. '220; w. McHugh. Power Co.. 206; G. Armstrong. T. N. 0.. 205; P: Nicol- lson, Gamble-Robinson, 204. Gambles and Advance Win Four Points Each Friday Gamble Robinson and The Advance teams each won four points in the Commercial bowling league. Gamble-Rob. 872 .. 792 . 960 .2644 Power Co. .777 771 912 2460 Gamble-Robinson won all four points the Power Co. being outclassed in the play. The Advance achieved revenge for a recent defeat in which the Saint and all other sinners of the T. N. 0. team has so much fun. Art Saint spoke so badly of the defeat that his ‘name will have'to be changed as he showed him- self no Saint. However it was a great old game anyhow and watched with much interest, and also listened to the same way. T. (c N. O. . 868 882 976 . 2762 Advance . . 1037. 935 . 1018.... 2990 The Advance won the four points. Here is the honour roll:-â€"-T._ Whit- ney, 605 (295); C. Alton. 713 (271); C. Kraby, 696 (328); W. McHugh. 632 (224) G. Wallingford 621 (211). Try The Advance Want Advertisements Timmins NEWEMURE MATINEE DAILY AT 2.30 RM. Evening-â€"7.00 p.m. (continuous performance) Complete Change of Programme Every MONDAY, WEDâ€"NESDAY and FRIDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 27â€"28 WITH LOUISE FAZENDA, WILLIAM COLLIER, JR., JOAN PEERS AND TOM HOWARD “Rain Or Shine” will make you laugh louder and funnier than ever before. ' South Porcupine WITH CLAUDETTE COLBERT, HERBERT MARSHALL AND GEORGE METAXA A sensational story from the “inside” of the-hushed-up doings of ~ - the rich alayworld! Specialtyâ€"“SCREEN SOUVENIR" Addedâ€"“100 p.c. SERVICE” FOX MOVIETONE NEWS Midnight Show, Friday, November 27thâ€"at 11.30 p.m. General Auto Repairs Body Work and Painting We will estimate a complete motor overhaul, painting and body repaks. Our prices are right and all work guaranteed. WITH HELEN WRIGHT, ROBERT HOMANS, FRANK CLARK and BUDDY HUNTER Serialâ€"“FINGER PRINTS”-â€"â€"Eplsode No. 1 Mouse Cartoonâ€"“FIRE FIGHTERS” PATHE SOUND NEWS 44 BRUCE AVENUE WEDNES. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2â€"3 Laura LaPlante and Lew Cody in Cartoonâ€"“SKELETON DANCE Addedâ€""SNAPSHOT” Specialtyâ€"“SOCIALLY CORRECT” WEDNES. THURS. NOVEMBER 25â€"26 JOE COOK in “ RAIN OR SHINE”-â€"(‘U’) Ken Maynard and his Wonder Horse “Tarazan” IN ANOTHER ALL-TALKING WESTERN DRAMA Comedy “HOT WIRES” Cartoonâ€"“THE STORK MARKET” FOX MOVIETONE NEWS Midnight Show, Sunday. December Sunâ€"Showing double feature programmeâ€"“RANGE LAW” and “CALL OF THE WEST” COMING ATTRACTIONS: MONDAY TUESDAY, NOV. 30â€"DEC. 1 HOOT GIBSON in 66 SPURS ”â€"(“U”) ‘ “ SECRETS OF A SECRETARY ” EVEREADY SERVICE STATION FRIDAY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4â€"5 JOAN MARSH, HARRY MYERS. CLAUD ALLISTER and WILLIAM JANNEY DEC. DEC. DEC. WALLINGFORD" DEC. l4â€"l5â€"“BORDER LAW”â€"(“U") DEC. 16-l7â€"“LAST OF THE LONE WOLF" DEC. lbâ€"lBâ€"“BROADMINDED” The Towing Car is at Your Service “ MEET THE WIFE ” (Most Up-to-date Garage in the North) 7-â€" 8â€"“CALL OF THE WEST" 9â€"10-â€"“PUBLIC DEFENDER” llâ€"lZâ€"“NEW ADVENTURES GET-RlCll-QUICK “ RANGE LAW ” Addedâ€"“SPECIALTIES" Steven’s Amusement Parlours â€"-the most popular of all indoor sports Thursday, Nov. 26th, 193} bowling Like envy other national tune, it is here to eta. Ite heelth- giving flee ere endorsed by medial men and en- joyed by everyone. pgwung isAndt .1“, Alleys. Surroundings are clean, equipment in modern and cozy. Come in. tMgitxht It!!! Phone 280 SOUTH PORCUPINE Phone 15 Ontario

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