Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 4 Mar 1935, 1, p. 6

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eli lily ver kin lipstick are Db hiding hind full v. Mo: than fall w 18 BC BEAUTIEUI 1 rt HANDS ARFE CONSTANTLY INX A BEAUTY CONTEST American Actof polish it of MADGE EVANS showing her beautiful hands glisâ€" ainsi the black velvet negligee. Note the natural pale nail lish, and lack of brilliant makeâ€"up generally Decrec IKST® LEVEI *X ns w y during th sason. The period measuy ind 1 an em ered place beneficent JR Rickard Tollands be V LC PE A DPR 1A l piC to Previous Puzzh en mb 11 And liais knuckles, and back this time I think e the general routine « a matter of fact, if ly manicure in a sal tary home care can minute or two a means massaging the tle warm oil every : cuticle back with a tc |ha.nds are washed a nail cutline with an . 8 French. 98 Fragran fingt varm watt Rinse thor washirg ex But we‘ concerned War fi}~ Insect ie tion. Father. He was â€" by David Sudb Dealer in UT hand loth UI n Wash 1¢€ ind h ba 1 } FNAl Ted nd l 31 ‘k of the hand. By every woman knows e of a manicure. As if you have a weekâ€" alon the supplemenâ€" Rem 1€ nle on a preliminary ompleted the enâ€" rosscutting north ‘ _ anticipated ore II NE Jermit ehood ay. iticle il d â€"~tThat we ar: ian the maniâ€" is nsed more er‘ part of the iently in lukeâ€" d, bland soap. ‘mber that the l oil from the h this oil with several timss A V 6 rd ut way from me nose," yelled en approachâ€" °r . reporters. highâ€"salaried > sure all the cle with a , pushing every time cing over v board. : supplemenâ€" iled gown to It simply ited t 1 1ra ma Â¥ocal hr kâ€"Â¥4 Practic( 111 litâ€" the the the has become commercial in itself, deâ€" spite the ideals of amateurism. Amateurs Must Eat "Amateur governors of the Dominâ€" !ion apparently fail to realize that even a sim>nâ€"pure must eat and have a place to sleep. Sport heads appear to \be so far removed from the amateur proâ€" letariat that they do not understand the effect of presert economic condiâ€" ions. They fail to see the situation from the viewpoint of the athlete who wonders where he can get an honest !Jjob, The attitude of the writer has beenâ€"if a hockey player can get a real Job by reason Of the fact that he can k play reascnably good hockey, then good luck and more pewer to him. He is or‘ly getting the living to which he is entitled and hockey, or baseball or lacrosse qualifications are just as proâ€" per as trade qualifications. , "At the present time, the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association, an affiliâ€" 'ate of the Amateur Union, is n:t doing !au in its power to encourage amateur throughout the Daminion. The writer hclds no brief for the hockey clubs in the maritime provincesâ€"it is said that they have played ls0sely with the amateur codeâ€"out the CAMH.A. travelling expenses and operating costs are considered. One fault is that playâ€" ers everywhere have graduated from the idea that they should or might buy their own ouifits. Buying one‘s own skates, sticks, sweater, whatnot doesn‘t exactly fit into the "big business" scheme of amateur sport of the present day. "Revenue at the box office is increasâ€" ingly important and so the clubs have ‘ or gone Cut ofter "box office amateurs‘ to chtain gate receipts with which to | take part in the playdowns prescribed i these decisions, by none other than the amateur auâ€" thorities themselves. thing to a vicious circle in which the sport governing bodies are included although they don‘t seem to realize it as indicated by their hampering, anâ€" noying and antiquated regulations. Not or.ly have commercial sponsors replasâ€" ed sport enthusiasts, but amateurism It‘s > the ne\*‘ H\Iotor League Asks for «»«VIILCIILICU dAUUUL l1i1lld UiUiL 3 of the decisions. But aside from that it is important to point out that nothâ€" ing really new has happened so far as the factor of inflation is concerned and harness and | that regardless of the gold clause matâ€" ter, there have been and are many ways of inflating the currency if the Governâ€" ment should want to do that. The power of Congress to devalue the dollar to print currency has never been seriously questioned. Consequently, we do not feel that conclusion is valid that of themselves alone, open the door to inflation." Change in License Year The Ontario Motor League at its arnual meeting at Toronto passed a resolution urging the Ontario Governâ€" "The Amateur Union and the Cana dian Amateur Hockey Association ap parently have failed to realize that thi oneâ€"time amateur club "angel" has disâ€" appearedâ€"the â€" individual sportsmar who dug deeply into his own pocket t sponsor a hcomeâ€"town team for the love of sport or as a hobby. His place has been taken by commercial interests fo: obvious reasons and the sponsors have come to stay. It is a good thing they have appeared becaus© without them, plenty cf sport would now have no sponsor at all. Mcrey Big Factor "It costs money to run any kind of a teamâ€"almost any hockey squad, these days, represents an investment runâ€" ning into four figures when equipment Need Clarity in Laws "How can sports be governed without a definite, clearâ€"cut code in printed form in the hands of sport spansots and participants? Ignorance of the amateur law in the rank and file of team players and individual athletes across Canada is appalling and the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada is directly to blame. "The constitution, yâ€"laws and reguâ€" lations of the Canadian Unidn are not only so obsolete that they are alm:ost useless, but they have become so in volved, complicated and contradictory by repeated amendment and counterâ€" amendment to meet some slight flurry of the moment that any interpretation can be read into the book by merely turning the pages until the favourabl»e clause is found. due to the fact that Athletic Union of Canac its allied governing bo kept abreast of the tim« details Oof sport control impractical. with. This second letter M. Gladish, formerly secre Or.tario branch of the A.A.T at present sports editor of 7 This photograph illustrates two OuiL Six nnd Dave Komonen, winner of th long distance runs and well known picture right to left, are shown Komo himself and P. M. Sangster of Daviso Sports Writer and Forme: Offhcial Claims Amatew Blame Sport s on |!* Amateur Officrtals . * Recently Th letter from W Athletic Union owing being i A ¢ Athletice Union h come Obsolete. In a recent public statement t W. A. Fry of the Amateur Union of Canada made the c i that attacks from the outs sing the A.A.U. officials der g A. ut that 1 vithin the egrowing DAVE KOMONEN AND HIS NHEW CHEVROLET COACH opinion of this writer much uble in amateurism today is e fact that the Amateur nion of Canada and some oi governing bodiss have not 16 AdGvance publishned A. Fry of the Amate f Canada, and the f the nature cof a Two Types of Knee Action ; and v have b A 1 iistanding championsâ€"the Chevrolet he Boston Marathon and many other i in Canada‘s mining north. In the trainer, the Champion runner son‘s Garage, Sudbury. l 1€ mon ida) chec Mr. min Mrs The Ontario Motor League at its. arnual meeting at Toronto passed a resolution urging the Ontario Governâ€"| meant toâ€"set up a motor license ySar beginning April insteag of January. It was pointed out that at present many persons stored their automobiles | for the first three months of the cal-l endar year. It was estimated about 47,000 cars were laid up in this way and the Government as a result lost, beâ€"| cause of the reduced gasoline consumpâ€" | tion, some $329,000 in gasoline taxss' each year. ' Compulsory inspection of brakes andl | i headlights three times a year was adâ€" vocated by the Kent Club. *"Fully oneâ€" third of the motor cars cn the highâ€" ways certainly would not pass an inâ€" spection test," J. N. Wilson said. R. M. Smith, Deputy Minister Oof j Highways,. intimated in future a traffic line would be used to mark the centr> of highways wherever possible. , The fly in ths: ointment appears to be that important as it was, the gold clause decision was only one of many uncertainties overhanging the bond and security markets. "Consequently," it obsorves, "no lasting significance should be attached to the strength of last Monday‘s market, and the logical expectation is for stock prices now or shortly to begin reflecting the generâ€" ally unfavourable environment created by current political and other condiâ€" tions." uncertainties _ overh and security market it observes, "no 1 should be attached Reviewing events of the past week including the gold clause decision of the Unitsd States SBupreme Court, Moody‘s Investment Service, Inc., is unâ€" able to find support for enthusiasm with respect to either the market outlook or the prispects for an early continuance of the upturn in general business in the United States. Recalling the temporary sharp rise in stock prices which followed th> gold clause decisions, this company‘s current Survey points out that prices have all receded from their high points in the "gold clause boom," and vontures the opinion that "It looks as though the cheerful forecasts of much improved business activity would suffer a simiâ€" lar fate." The fiy in ths: ointment appears to sees Fly in Ointment in the Gold Clause Decision spe the the ful The following is from the Hotel Orâ€" ‘nd Notes of the (Florâ€" i) Timesâ€"Union:â€""Among the lunâ€" ecn hosts at the hotel yvesterday weovre . and Mrs. W. H. Pritchard, of Timâ€" ns, Ont., who had as their gues!s ‘s. A. H. Shipple, of Omaha, Neb d Miss B. Pritchard, of New York. ev are wintering in Daytona Beach." body suc be chaos has done "Amateu adly in n ‘resl0¢ hout 126 one m« 1sâ€"â€"the y vho chase m out t] and d an 3 11¢ in W sider YÂ¥Oun . Bill Fry has declared that neutral naticnal goaverning as the union, there would thin a yvear" Quite true; There must be a head, a ority. But to have the reâ€" ‘ecagnition to which it is ‘ governing body in sport must be as upâ€"toâ€"date as hich it and give 128 e going to prohibit. rt in Canada today i new constitutions, mo n to ths viewpoint CZ affected by its deliberâ€" iz and rugged enthusiâ€" he elusive puck or tries re in wrecking what amateur hockey dow H func ) th livingâ€"ra MmaAk | "And Chuck Gardiner carried out | promige. ’ ‘"Never in the histbry of hockey ? ‘a better exhibition of goalkeeping be !given than that which ‘Gardiner t 'Greab' put up against Detroit in t} | championship final. "Stopping pucks with his feet, t hands, his legs and his body, Gardir thrilled time after time the Chica fans who little dreamed that they w« sesing their beloved captain in acti l for the last time. Gardiner was invincible. "Paul Thompson, Lionel Conach Taffy Abel, Johnnie Gottseig and ott Black Hawk veterans were amazcd the stops he made, his ccolness, 1 confidence and steadiness at all times ' That was ‘Chuck‘ Gardiner‘s val dictory. "And what a finale!" Port Arthur News-Chronicle:â€"â€"Ima-i girary conversation in a United States theatreâ€"*"So those are the Dionne parâ€" ! ehts! Why don‘t they show us Lhe‘ quintuplets?"â€""Oh, the Ontario Gov-’ | ernment won‘t permit them to be put on exhibition." "Funny people; those Canadians; don‘t know enough to pick up some easy money when they see it." | "Detroit crushed Chicago by 5 to and left the Windy City fans gasping. " <«Chuck‘ Gardiner took all the blam that night. " ‘It was my fault, fellows,‘ he sai staggering into the Chicago dressin room, after the struggle, ‘but we wil get it back Tuesday night.‘ "Throughout the first and sece periods Gardiner continued superb. "Then came the tragic third, in wh he faltered under the terrific gunfire Goodfellow, Young and other stars the great Red Wing machine. ‘"Then came the third terrific mat against Detroit on Chicago ice, on t eventful Sunday night when Major NV Laughlin stood all set to receive t Btanley Cup from President Frank C;i aer, of the National Hockey Leagus. Refused to Quit. "Few know that Charlie Gardiner w a sick man prior to this battle. "Twice, just previous to going out the ice, his stomach had turned, l:a ing him pale and nervous. "Someone suggested that Joe Star sub goalie be placed in the Chicago n: but Gardiner overheard it and rebell at once. ""Out into his reguilar position the Chicago captain stepped, confident anc determined. "Talk about Lesueur, Vezina, Hains worth, Worters, Roach and the othce greatsâ€"Gardiner excelled, in my opin ion, any goalkeeper who ever pulled 01 the pads. "Better goalkeeping than Charlie fur nished in the championship finals had never been witnessed. "‘That was a great night for the or and only ‘Chuck‘ Gardiner. "Throughout the season and in tl playâ€"off games against Canadiens, M; roons and in the first two games again Detroit, Gardiner was almost invil cible. "When Charles Hamilton ~Gardiner died at Winnipeg in June last, one of the most colourful figures that ice heckey has ever produced passed on to his reward, leaving to mourn his loss a loving widow and one son, as well as countless thousands of hockey lovers. " ‘*Chuck‘ Gardiner was taken away at the peak of his hockey career. "Just a few weeks previous he had stood in front of the Chicago nets in that final game against Detroit at Chicago on the night of April l11th, reâ€" pelling every desperate effort of the Detroit Red Wings to score. Gardiner captained his team to a brilliant 1 to 0 overtime victory over Detroit and thus took to Chicago for the first time the Stanley Cup and the hockey championâ€" ship of the world. At the east and west sides of th main entrance in the Maple Leaf Gar dens hang two pictures . . . the ons or the east pictures a true likeness of th late Shorty Horne . . . Westward wal braces a full figure reproduction of th late Charles Gardiner in action . During a recent afternoon game, th | writer noticed a group cf fans, of th younger kind, looking at these two picâ€" pictures . . .They wondered just wh | Shorty Horne was and how good Gar diner really performed in the nets the Chicago club . . . the fans coult hardly be blamed, as there is not a or letterpress near the pictures . Just sportsmen . . .M Shorty Horn: hac lived, he would now be ons of th greatest right wingers in the NH.I ._. . That boy could really bodyâ€"check . . . he was all power on the attack . . The Leafts purchased Shorty from Stratford . . . Great things were in storc for this fine athlete ... Then one sumâ€" _mer afternoon, up north, his canoe wen! over in a squall . . . As long as it is ou: privilege to witness hockey games, we‘l never forget that impressive memoria service in respect to the memory of late Shorty Horns, attended by all Toâ€" ronto fans at the old Mutual Strest Gardesus ... In the official NHL. guide, Gorman pays the following tribute to the late Chuck Gardiner. Gorman as managing director of t Chicago Black Hawks last season whe they won the Stanley Cup after a grei uphill fight, knew too well that tt late Chuck Gardiner was far from beir well during those final games with t Detroit Red Wings. Gardiner the Grect Tommy Gorman, now general mana ger of the Montreal Maroons, kne Chuck Gardiner better than any othe member of the National Hockey Leagu Sport Fans Seem to Soon Forget Heroes Fans Failed to Recognize the Careers of Two Whox Pictures Hang at Mapk Leaf Gardens. By Buany Morganson rrific match ice, on that i Major Mcâ€" receive the , Frank Calâ€" irk Ma ns onC )Y Starting on Friday last and to conâ€" tinue until further notice, upwards of 200 employes of the shop and car deâ€" partments of the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway at North Bay will be benefitted by an increased schedule of working hours, which will give them 40 working hours per week, instead of 35, as has been the practice for the past two years. An increased volume cof business beâ€" ing handled by the road. and the necesâ€" sity of effecting repairs to cquipment required for maintenance work during the coming summer were the reasons given Work Schedule Increased hok in the T. N. (). I{y hOp‘) | which undu bag t if ths In trenc a JUFr,. she can ; to match embroide espe dain ng maA make th cause of o co bandk and ba bric or Fcellowing the Fashion A simple way to be in style is The w edle c Showing no fear ol the serious operatiOn "upside down stomach," 10â€"yearâ€"old Alyce ing patient of Omaha, Neb., is pictured in Miss. The allment has pushed the heart lung. Death may result at any moment matchain ]¢ T‘he colour of 11 Bizarre Colours er ways she can folloy thout the shoes being g n themselves, as many i1 ie certainly are. I saw C isembles in which the id silk with a bag of the another ens>mble of bri oman who is handy with h an follow the fashion witho! pense. She can make her ow atch her shoes in colour, an: ces are of textile she may eve milar textile for the bag. C get a couple of handkerchic i the colour of her shoes, an ‘r her initials on them to gi f individuality. dv HOW TO FOLLOW THE FAsHION OF HAVING AND â€" ACCESSORIES MATCH draont 6 embles [ silk wi another es with ile. ReC had as for example the same leather, Or it may be a m in such small det ef and shoes, cr h carf and shoes. Th ance one for sumn when shces are in irs than in winter, a1 ing accessOories wou Inexpensive n who is h:f ollow the fa LyHia Le Baton Walker ur of the applique de the shoe laces, the ba; SAces ~are imnm. mno i in winter, and ha cessories would n em uninteresting b VAich Ihe. sho2 bag of the sam mble of brillian E JUNE McHENRY Smiles, Tho‘ Death Ne: n Aat favouri being gay C many in th I saw one ( ‘A the. shoi The que design (which can be obtain the bag matching the colour of the ie necesâ€"| provide juipment| all hap have il ma i0 1 itchi (ils in 1\ ind h memb seldon side ion the patchw nend be in keepi cther meth both shoes bag, hat 0o: )le th reen, nes S( UI 11 Out n 1€ Jun McecHenry, her hospital bed to one side and from suffocation In( Appliqu summe piac tion € 1e 11 Th [ 6| MONDAY . MARCH 47TH ba 11 ind Shoes Match 1 K How t« 11} tagine rEport. benefitted by ximatzly 100 nd h 1 ind pa. thank unifort We ar aued be ) Ahnand appliqu 5 cent (3â€"cent Direc 11 #cneral change recomâ€" 1¢ mA th 1t

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