(Montrea playoers, were to b Onâ€"all tal pal ranged and th who is a DA amateur the : Hu: than pa "delivery the Mill peared t out with tre ht team if Godin, thier, treinen‘t 1¢€ Len Godin Boosted â€" in Montreal Paper Nee H. andi him The | MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11TH i1935 ‘Ollowi diens Team Andy Congiano‘s Orchestra 10â€"NIGHTâ€"â€"â€"Monday, Nov. 1 1 Special Armistice Dance Tommy Stephens Orchestra Dancing Photo n A Y 1C Riverside Pavilion Wednesday and Saturday Real Estate and Insurance is now centrally located at Has the Answers that sams ‘expre:s 1t 1. J. McKA Y 'ansfer 1rC to Montre 20 Pine St. North We Have Moved |! SLOra ame ‘expressions of rsusd by Canadiens wnership of Emile Savard, that young Frenchâ€"Canadiens AI Ki Ti he Godin progress raining camp desâ€" med him with five as having caught Sylvio Mantha. Vatch this space in the next issu> for dotails of the Winter Opening ¢ rolic. i NANOCKeY scory in port section which information â€" that cking about givinz id Northern News Montt ib . who did the last season with kland Lake apâ€" i" after his tryâ€" iens for it szems for him on the name in which s have a more lad., who made seems to have not vet 23. he‘: r can be arâ€" Timmins star rmer pro. statr is dep>nding inadien ngadiens that s most promâ€" s nst want to neral underâ€" > for futures. atrzal are to )mMr N. . al Canaâ€" Amateur Jitney Dancing mptr in Mon itures.| on the roll ire to| two games. senior| â€" The league st )e arâ€"| points; Gamble s star Power 11 points Jo C. Armstron D. Stewart H. Web B. McQuarric W. McHugh E. Towers E. Salomaa closing stages to win eatch game 0y a good margin with Guidice and . Waiâ€" lingfcrd coming with the winning points Ths honour rcll saw seven names written upon it. G. Wallingford and A. Guidics, Adâ€" vance, 700 and 677; H. Webb and B. Mc@uarrie, Power 656 and 609; D. St>â€" wart and C. Armstrong, T. N. O. 619 and 601: H. Horester, Gambls‘s , 628. It is only fair that Joe Toal should be The T. . O.; won the third dus t the superior bowling of J. Toal wh rolled 336 to win the game by 44 pin and one point. The Advance stopped Gamble‘s win ning streak by taking all four poin‘s The printers started each game fo a loss, but put on the pow:r play at th closing stages to win each game pv Some Surprises in Commercial League by lowly Power the Commercial they gave the le: The TFower g games, rolling t the season in t not yet received his transfer from the N.O..HA. branch but it is expecicd that he will get this transfer and be a reguâ€" lar member of the team. Boucher conâ€" siders him one of the best prospects for pro. ranks that he has in his club." Len‘s step up in hockey is all the roâ€" markable when it is remembered that he did not takse hockey seriously until he was 16 years old. In fact at that age he had done little skating. Hockiy ccaches agree that if Len had started The Advance Takes Four Hoints from Gambles: Power_ Won â€" from the earlier be in | Du "Godin went to Quebsc where | a good showing. It was fig needed further seascning so turned ovir to the Canadians who are coached ‘by Bill Bouc} time Canadian plaver. French and he can play hockey transfer gces through he‘ll â€"h benefit of expert tuition this w fast amateur company. Tc C Toal Saint acasse il h 12 been allowed t d done little skating. Hock: gree that if Len had starte his hockey, he would probabl top ranks of the game toâ€"da;s AS Jitney Dancing honour by rolling 592 for qul graosDded t their first the second . won the wling of . n the gam indin and A bowlin ague lea )ia yer. @itional ower 184 206 230 169 bed suUurprIis: Advance ing leag 1084 is. 16 Advance 14 .and id in tnhe pI > play as I 215 231 211 224 196 236 > third dus to J. Toal who me by 44 pins 1 Star, wrot e to a query here he ‘nad s figured h: *‘ $s0o hcC Wwa first ousand 9062 180 188 148 336 174 156 204 sprun boys i he has im thse d that yYs in when If his 601 6149 592 6098 595 551 | two Mail and Empire retires, Liberalism fer the most serio tory.,." says Dr. J. throughout the world blooded Indians in a Even within com; years, three of the nsw games have had It was Dr. James A. 1 dian, who while tea field YMC.A., attac slender peach baskets Wherever the thrills of snov are extant; wherever racing trot through blinding winter st gallop along icy derby trails, fluence of sportâ€"loving India: pioneer French and English se still being exerted. And what about lacrosse? a game that figureq prominentl history of Canada nearly a cCc centurics ago; a sport so gener pular that England, Australia â€" United States have accepted enthusiasm excseding its recey its native land, ang still so truli dian that most of the stic couragement to the sunâ€"b as they madly paddle the through the sweeping should be indebteq to the men who steered their through Canadian stream when the Redmen were 1J1a un eigh polo Engl allyv EKngiish schcoll clutched it in . wards the goa rugby‘to a wa than one hund be exact. TFar Origin of the Game of Rugby Fostball Canadians Have Been Re sponsible for Introducin several Prominent Ne 9 m ® O â€" CGagnon Canie Eddy Horester Nicolson PCWer win point. he 1 Total Advance To Hornby Alton Walling!forc Guidice Wallingford bt 1ames. secured alle ied fin ail ime" in ainâ€"child dealer a Tommy Cotck Going Well for Chicago Blackhawks abou A} Pule e a ctickhandler. as rms which will adot By H. ‘H. Rox _ nineteenth c ck oal ar waitin t ba. rform i IT 16 mt Gamble 146 169 141 +100 168 1€ points 941 780 were ills C Do 114 If Mr. Hey ie Ind 1t‘ "pi} shown it hawk sc d in b:t 11 163 2080 244 im nA 21 iC T N. O 1M 089 36 ba 628 440 485 THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, _Spider McKinnon o Down in Kansas City bu Millic tured "Spid Local Lad will be Part of "Pony" Line on Southern City Professional Team. He will wo 1J Hecto in to h nine pc L Roberts Going Too hi He‘ll be NC On MC 1t NY McKINNON sy Northit] iC ike a colour contriâ€" down there is one over the line are no yY are here and the of last year has that make the fans like it down there with lfe, a pair of players [e, a palr of players wvith the idea being lly form a "pony‘ i Regina boy and ie Edmonton junior . Mike‘s a run two illy has another his folks call him) ell before leaving crywhere he got that really meant 1] 0 training pracâ€" as iInjJured reâ€" ‘d in a creditâ€" Maunder) more of closeâ€"texâ€" small wiry frame, wh> was the darlâ€" ike shinny crowds _such a thing as a d game of hockey, ty by car this week. vine‘s car in which urite ever sincs he m Timmins in 1983 nrockâ€"green Town s League making is "kid line‘"‘ with * said the only money hockey as r." "But boy I‘m brilliant uniâ€" on v hockey trayelâ€" by Rcoberts the who made an ear when Doâ€" d the Millionâ€" game. He too , by "Porky." City on n that date and the problem of "Roll" Richer, ‘tropolis. rsuaded "Spidâ€" ffered with the rky" who said ~sure the Mcâ€" thern New Hamilton Herald that sanctions are to Italy, but sanc longer to go off th Friday evening the police « boys, one 15 years of age and abcout 12 yvears old, in the act ing the seal on a T. N. car, with the evident purpos ing from the car. The two bo blamed for breaking into a 1 ware warehouse, as well as ta from freight cars recently, t thing of much value was st lads will appear in Juvenile week to answer to the charge: ing and entering. No Dead Spots Down Below Down below, lots of towns are st: enjoying football. In all the larg centres, football overlaps with hocke and in the spring hockey overlaps wit baseball. There‘s never a time wh sport is absolutely dead. Not so in it North. There are nsarly two mont} in the fall and another two in t spring when spectator sport just isn‘ Boys Caught in Act of Breaking Seal on Cars Girls‘ Hockey? Speaking of hockeyâ€"there‘s a pet tent rumour abroad that thers may a couple of girls‘ hockey teams here winter. It‘s not so many years that Ontario "Ladies‘ teams" were q popular and played a fair brand hoackey. ganized sport, to chance to play? ‘nst sport conscious." They play all the Canadian games there and many of them well. It‘s altogether probable that a greater proportion of young men and women are in organized sport of some sort in North Bay than th:ey ars in any other Northern town. And was not that the original idea behind orâ€" annual meelings are neld here, Nori Bay occasionally comes in for son ?prominence in connection with t N.:O. H. : ‘Outside of that ... . whali Well, North Bay usually asks for an receives a bye in the junior playdown Isn‘t that just dandy? A city on« known throughout the land bscause « its famous lsI'rappers who participats in long campaigns and usually wer far in the playofis, has been relegate to the "bye" class, like some way place where it is only possible t make about ons trip a season." That‘s just another indict,‘menz of EP way amateur sport in Canada has bee handled in the past decade or sc Instead of cleaning things ugWand a least attempting to get sport i ' on a ‘better basis, more tru "1 om munityâ€"wide and hence natisaâ€"wic the big shots, who after all ds mak their living from amatcur sport an who are entitled to it, have run thing so that hundreds of towns in the sam position as North Bay, have simply lo: interest. â€" They have their own leagues and are satisfied with then now. Perhaps it‘s a bzsier way afte @ll. North Bay can hardly ‘be calle: North Bay‘s All Right bud According to the North Bay Nugget.) tea there wasn‘t much interest in that city| Th in the N.O.H.A. annual, primarily beâ€" | exg causs there still isn‘t a covered in there. ‘"‘And why should it ts in-i T terested?" queries the Nugget, "North| mu Bay is no longer an important member| soc of the Northern Hocksy Association.| tif; The Gateway City‘s sole claim to any| beyr big share of glory in N. 0. H. A. an lies in the fact that its energetic secâ€" | tha retaryâ€"treasurer W. A. Thompson, is ijor a resident there. ‘Because Thompson is po; a resident of thisâ€"city and because the| pa annual meetings are held hers, North, Bay occasionally comes in for some) 4 prominence in connection with 1hefmp The local juniors have not done an thing yet about organizing but it‘s e pected the exucutive will get togeth soon to make plans for the winter. A though no announcement has be made, it seems probable that the juni game will oe conducted much along t] sam: lines as it was last in ports, no big money ideas about itâ€"ju junior hockey handled the way a: real sport fan would want his spo looked after. the game. Several of the t>a already cnosen coaches and good early start, the juniar and town leagues ought to take c gcod proportion of wouldâ€"be playvers here this wintsor. It‘s t idea. skating Hore Already Timmins dossn‘t nced artificial ic: to get early skating. That was prover this wsekâ€"snd when it seemed tha about half the to>nâ€"age lads in tow: put on their skates and glided up anc down the streats in the residential area Sunday‘s morning‘s rain made everyâ€" thing â€"psrfectâ€"provided the skate didn‘t take a tumbl=. The hardâ€"packsc snow turned to ice and even though : steady drizzle fell most of the day, th« oys (and some girls too) had a swel time cf it. Mothers had a lot of drying af clotkhes to do though. time cf it. Mothers had a lot of drying of clothes to do though. The same rain put the skids unde: the skiszs plans for an early opening The big jump out near the sand claims is all sat now, that it needs quite a bit of snow. Ns application has been heard at town council for those rinks in the ball park that are to gives the icca boys and gir‘s a real chance to play the game. Several of the havo weckâ€"end that bonds for both "Sp and ""Porky" had bsen arrang*>d cessfullyv. "Epider‘" is the son of Mtr. Jack McKinnon,. 35 C:nmerci He was in town for a fall, thinking seriously 3f tu with the local senior N. O. H + From All L Deing apyp take so m big gun. ° peop ak the with to play| me is havo| tel "â€" No Fireworks Saturday at Annual Meeting of N.O°H.A. 111111 m he DH # “.. # _# _ _# w t W# .# + # t L " .u:oo. w# ## stt .“ # t# e . _A 00.00_0.. _# #. _# .â€â€˜ ww # # t# * # #* w + «ow # *# w # # ## tw ## ## t# # # W# o# *# + # ## # L ## #. #. #. _#. _# _ #. _# *" *« .0 0.“. .0..00 .†.“ * a*eos*er*es w #+ O.H .A id Roge 1€ 1D6 the Ccentral group. sSudbury Refused Blanket Entry he Nickel Belt Hockey League was sed a blanket entry for a team en ecommendation ion by D:scember 15th, for cerâ€" tes and transfers for every memâ€" f the team. In the case of Kirkâ€" Lake and Sudbury this means the players who make up the senâ€" itry must be known in D:cember, vhen playoff time arrives, as it een with Sudbury in recent years. Cerms of Affiliation Adopted : terms of a new affiliation with J.H A., published in the last issue > Advance, were adopted by the ng. Thess will, of course, have bnasseq by the OH.A. executive. nain change in the affiliation, if ed, is trat the N.O.H.A. will have )1 of all players in the association. not cknown yet how the: CO.H.A. kel Belt Refused Blanket Entry. Dean Kester, of iinmins, Elected a Member of the Excoutive at Saturâ€" ay‘s Gathering. Other Notcs of the Mseting. ary Wim. Th ind Mike Auge Te a VC rpplicati m the ‘n€ 11 r that the associatic ned with them. ving: teams â€" inâ€" t] w become members on payment of a $ 7 will be permitted : 5 the annual meetin Hockey â€" 4 h Bay on Sa > howls from larly Sudbury N.OH.A. hay be no radics ev will .be h with the Canadian Association. d fees of referees apâ€" N.O.H.A. for playcfi N.O.H.A. teams and _in future be met by decidea, â€"rather thâ€"n posl entry ‘TOotr; ‘a*â€"tealm was acceptsda for : d3ury Hockey Club ickel City in almos osition as they wer: a single exception red in the N.O.H.A secretary of the asâ€" iC nann ‘Lhese . expenses mes, and it was t the association bein éecilin onto n of North} New Liskeard the O.H.A changes, alâ€" at there wil , Viceâ€"Presiâ€" randa, and ented memb ‘Association turday afâ€" Northern , the exeâ€" e decided il changes andled by which will the N.O.â€" Canadian fo ide aime, | p $10 1€ of ‘Tea and Sale of Baking Auspices of the 1.0.D.E. be special 1 ment bf the der .O0.D.E. hcme of Mrs strest, on We Timmin have the P‘ry The Aavance Want Adavertisements 1 nompson members Timmins Hunters Say Hunting is Not So Good OtIOn have had t Bay and H This was place of t be sent to J. A. McDonald, of Sault Ste. Marie, whose wife is at present very ill. Mr. McDonald is a past presiâ€" dent of the N.O.H.A. Next Anrual at North Bay A motion introduced that would have had the anrual meeiing at North Bay and Haileybury in alternate vears. warded to Mrs. Mary Roach, wido of Chas. Roach. Mr. Roach was a ver active worker in N.OH.A. cirecles an had . many friends.both among its of ficers and the hockey players them selves. A Jleter of sympathy will als cay . All in all, the myet in that those pres>nt on all things that mi jure hockey in the ind 11 preside membe 1l ith thre2 10 lhe meeting id representa haplsau, Saul ded in K is and for tulatecd. ESTIMATES FREE mmins Goldsn Chapter TI.O.D.E. _the gift of presenting successful pleasing social events, so thers will pecial interest in the announceâ€" . ®f the tea and sale of baking unâ€" eard, Kirkland â€"Lake hA Forcupine and. Eent. The delegates ck in the grill room of tha dent of thi 1ll er( f the ann ied from y nual will> 4 Ba Lo M 1 of e annrual m aileybury in to d1 ianC the “00â€'0 00 "00 00 00 00 00 ‘00.0 ## ’00' z" Dodridg hat the immediaie past the N.O.H.A. be mad:s a ie OQO.H.A. advisory board. ig was largely attended tatives from Schreiser, ult Ste. Marie, Sudbury, rinnual m 11 11 mce2ting was a fine ons ‘sont kept a careful eye t might in any way inâ€" the North. They sucâ€" ng <hocksy on °a fair at they.ar> to bz conâ€" aclence will be forâ€" Mary Roach, widow [r. Roach was a very N.OH.A. cireles and sym McD Timmins Hunt Club morning from their 44 on the T. N. O to be held at the 0osstt. 11 Hemlock of this week, Nov. Lake, Noranda, *‘"‘Immins were gathered at two n of the Empire rOomMl. ©Qll Marie, Su Hallevbury ead that the reting should year. In 1936, be in North as no. patrâ€" ‘ said, since old enough Mayor R. Wynne, E. were the wint down camp ccok.