Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 16 Jan 1936, 1, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

®# # # # wl t # *ag¢. #. (®. )* “..0'““. ie sn in on oh. on o. on on w4 v4, 134 1 44 0\0‘“ # # uns 2t 2*, “:“.“.“.“'. Steven‘s Amusement Parlours 0 «. #_ #% 0_# # : 0 0’0 00..0 ## .00.’.’0 '0. {105 in in but ncriod Marshalls fell back to defensize hocâ€" ‘tey and shot the disc up the ice at every opportunity. Two quick penalâ€" ties gave Laflammes a chance to even it up but goalis Frank Whit: was wide awake. Snponce and Wallingford comâ€" nicely in on one attempt but the O was smothcrod. Carbonneau, I‘llies and Kennedy all had nicte opâ€" portunities but didn‘t have any luck. hâ€" pcriod erdcd with Lafammes the Mars roal. For nets, flank to â€"Mobra went in a in front i the loo0se j 2oal. v/as soon bnack in the game. It appears that he hit a muscle that temporarily paralyzed his arm. Fortin Scores For Marshalls After four and a half minutes of play the Marshall boys scored their first oal. Fortin started behind his own nets, flanked by Mobray and he passed to Mobray at the defence. Mobray went in and shot but Bastien cleared in front and PFortin sailed in to grab the loose puck and deposit it inside the The second with Laffammes Lrying to stop the rubber at centre ice ut usually it went right down to the ind. They were playing four forwards up and one defenceman near centre ice.. George Marshall broke away and Russ Kennedy Hits the Boards Just after the start Russ Kennedy, speeding down the ice, crashed into the boards and it was thought that his arm was broken or twisted and he was helped off the ice by brother Bob is injury was slight however and he v‘as soon back in the game. It appears that he hit a muscle that temporarily paralyvzed his arm. nicest defensive game witnessed here this season. After scoring early in the first stanza they started in play tlefonce and kept it up throughout the same, adding another goal with Laâ€" Hammes in the third. It‘s hockey that wins games but dcesn‘t. please the vrowd. This fact was clearly shown by the catcalls and bocing aimed at the Marshall ageregation. Lafiammes Timmins Loses by Narrow Margin to Powerful Porkies te T e more thi hnockey t and tam climaxed the last ; m~ the h hort passes Wallingford took a shot hat brought White down. Marshalls Score Again Marshalls fell back again in the thirga Marshalls Take The Lead In Commercial Hockey League Marshalls Win 2â€"1, While McDowells Take Bre Bastien a Standout in Goal For Laflammes. Show Wonderful Display in Last Period Rall; JANUARY 167H, 1836 T} â€"the most populat of all indoor sports last game the heat,. Mar: from Lafliamme le McDowells g howling wide op:n hockey and were at a to figure out Marshalls style of Timmins, Ontario Phone 280 Marchall Defensive first gam:s savw M Come in toâ€"nigh bowl â€" on â€" Brur Alleys. _ Surrow are clean, equipm modern and cozy Bowling is not a fad. Like any other national game, it is here to stay. Its healthâ€"giving qualiâ€" ties are endorsed by medical men and enâ€" jJoyed by everyone. ond Period Defensive x ¢l iat turned out, in spite ther Monday night, was ified with the evening‘s irted out rather slowly the first game and was a determined drive in hn the Brewers turned [arshalls tock the opeéenâ€" imes by a score of 2â€"1 s grako>d the nightcap toâ€"night and Brunswick Surroundings equipment is ive Game Marshalls play game witnessed er scoring early started io play throughout the lshots at White but he w proof. Wallingford knocke twice with power shots one in. The game | I Laflammes all inside th 1shoot-ing rubber at White Summary : Dunn passed but Bell hit the Dunn worked r he came out t« utes for slashing and ta referee and while he was and Walsh combined fo men‘s secong score, the f« the goal. Bowen and Cook ized for rubbings shoulde Barkley was chased for tr Guinard in front of the goal a: Brewers started working. They sw the McDowell nets but couldn‘t Broewers Change Uniforms The secong period saw the B appear in the Timmins Senior: forms and the play was much ea follow. McDowells Win Second McDowells took a 3â€"1 decis the unfortunate Brewers. Alth Brewers had the better of only the good work of Christ the nets for the garagemen ; game. The final frame saw a termined rush by the "kids" w buzzed about the McDowell hornets. Both teams started w tically the same coloured and uniforms, making play hard low. Brewers Miss Fine Chances The Brewers missed chancss a start of the game when Gauthie: Evans both missed. Evans was h: a perfect pnass from Gauthier i: corner and missed the nst. Ri broke through time and again or be bottled up and unable to pass Dowells rushed hard and on a Bc Richards combination they got first tally, Richards doing the sc Walsh, Bowen and Barkley were front of the nets and had shots at barie but he turned them all asic Barkley was chased for tri 2, Marshalls, Russ Kennedy bray) 3. Laflammes, Bob Kennedyv Penalties: Marshall. Marshalls: Goal, White: Chelest, Grant; centre, Ken: wards, Mobray, Marshall; spa lebois, Fortin, Seguin, Gillan Laflammes: Goal, Bastien Wallingford, Joe Delmont Spence; forwards, Carbonne spares, Luke Renaud, Villeneuve, Kendall. Official Laflammes playeq five men up : Marshalls would break away with and threeâ€"man rushes only to h Bastien rob them of sure counters. Kennedy Scores for Laflammes Bo Kennedy carrying the puck s at the goal from the blue line of ganging play and the puck â€" slip through White, for Laflammes‘ 0o goal. The goal came i2 minutes i the third period. From: then on 1 flammes put on a deterinined rush couldn‘t even it un. Everybody t 1. Marshalls, Fortin (Mob Penalties: Seguin, Cha tiree guard. After nedy got a c put Marshal game was m and Marshal tion. The L od and as th it Pengkities: seguin, Char second Period No score, no penalties. Third Periog ‘ry it into th hoisted dow ild touch it. three farshalls had i The Laflamms Montreal Maple Leat of promisin Goalie Hair s Kneeiing 1 of Toronto :« at the LEFT next evenin?g MceDowells ‘r was cha First Period 1€ po. Two Up ed for t] im MONTREAL CANADIENS FLY AGAIN, WHIPPING TORONTO LEAFS d Wh bDut *wWers Bre 11 ng to me Bo de )t te dow1 couldn‘ yvairmed nne Y Ba n i¢€ d e 1lY 0B over the rest, MCDoOweiis were Torcel to shoot up the ice but the disc alway: came back faster than before. Penalâ€" tiss to Bowen and Barkley just in creased the excitement in the wildes rally seen in the Commercial league yet Right up to the last bell, the "kids‘ were in there fighting hard and it wa: hav railly seen in Right up t were in the: a shame to Bu uld1 id Al McDeowell WA C Brew McD McDowe n ne on Leafs‘® home ice. The terans and look to be going of plavet«, mixed up with o1 Behind the goal is Leroy â€" worth from the other side. ‘s No. 14, in close attendan ewers put on another s2ombardme ie McDowell citadel and seoem®eq hooting from everywhere, but t Brewers on( Canada‘s skiiers were the first Chen whire the winter Olympic edge in this sport, Canada and C Loft is Tom Mobraaten, view of a skier in the air, a scer il V nort. AICF nt in and uldan‘t len Bowen iew of own. wells: Goal, Christiansen; deâ€" Slobasky, Roy; centre, Walsh; Is, Keon, Bowen; spares, Richâ€" inn. Bell, Barkley. in and had shots at Barbaric in‘t lengthen their lead. collided with the side of the hurt his knee. Goal, Barbaric Tony Delmonte; c rwards, _ Cook, th n ird ; one short and McDowells Richard, Walsh and Keon second s, Bower Keon, C . Walsh nerriau . Richa Barkley , Richard 15. Lukon, Slobasky,. Barkle second Periog iainson aving Third Period First Period om the and Therriault McDowelis were w looked like home ice. The SKIIERS FIRST CANADIANS ON WAY TO OLYMPIC® iating them everywhere, but net. When they on would be in Kets team stosd 11 U thank for this lastâ€" with one of his own de Leroy Goldsworthy, No r side. Sylvio Mantha tendance. Incidentalliyv. centre, Cll Therriault Lukon,. Deni ail BoOows( the "Kic and it w McDowe Frenchâ€"Ca places at l 14.20 mins.) little orced they did 4 .3( 7.0€ t athletes fromn c games will b United States a Vancouver, and ns which will b 3() tWO hali end Again been beaten handicaps s of the handi and to give t in the game. The f last wee their tei by worry, Here: 1 Advance were : half and only zames; now th the ‘F. N. O. mal Gt6tom. _ Lime When is the oing to call t imp U so ma ason a Did yo nd th m the T‘oâ€"m led 16 1€ eam. and ind joilir isted ofte handicap He ib Al kickin 1¢ 111 11 OW ien of old, when they whipped the highâ€"fiying Toronto lub, led the Playing Manager Mantha, have added a number o they are seen raiding the Leaf nets in one of their forays. emen and a Redshirt attacker. Blair, the other rearguard, Canadien forward, who has just made the shot. Buzz Bol] 2. and another Canuck raider are ready for a new thrust, nadiens went on to Chicago and whipped Hawks 2â€"1 the {et‘s due JTiC A 1‘m one consolationâ€"it took ok off your faces! Ang the t a great kick out Of it. vill have to ask for more audience gets any larger, the bowlers sit down the held. WrOoL the [ 61 lost a very close no doubt to sw Jack said last ve i1 1€ on Out In ‘the IiASL IC second half is reverse nd Gambles are on t. yill tell,. Army. chairman or secreta it muchâ€"wanted mee make h of ame fOr 1 home an Alfi¢ i last Friday if U ind, ‘Jut the obje to help a weak tea 1couragement to sti running the league zood harmony that past four years. he handicap doesn‘t e! If this is so. why OL 1 * The. pril 11 1J with A1 S some Ssome nicn to start the trek t Though the Finns and N ‘nding teams. Two of t Il Baadsvik, Montreal. 1 by the cream of world â€" m the tale as they Pow*r who have s and are a hard man ‘a diffe am in APrt C call W t "would Friday jut the asped out the don‘t need to +â€"â€"Power and to ther and they they wan up aAf the p1t of the first he last few is reversed. is It 100KS the league us1n a game ourselve and ) i ntreda \ ,:.“_ toward Gar Norwegians the Canuck alro yuUa@ad alro conceded <slno iing old will A V Iroquois Falls High School will be the visitors toâ€"morrow night at the skating rink when the Timmins High and Vocational Schosl hockey squad play their first home engagement in the Northern Ontario _ Secondary Sschools Association group. The Falls has a good team this year, as they had last year when they were tied with Timmins at the completion of the schedule. This year the Timmins lads are out to win and have improved considerably, it is reported. The faceâ€"off is called for eight o‘clock and it is announced that there will be an hour‘s skating for all who want it after the game. expects to lsave here anout the ZJoln of this month. Les has been one of th: most popular young men of the community and has taken an active part more particularly in the organizaâ€" tion and cperation of the Softball Association, of which he was secretary last season. It was as much due to his hard work as much as any other single person that the league made the success it did. The league will not find it easy to replace him. He was also a valuable member of the Friedman team, champions of the league. The move to Toronto is in the way of a promotion, for the branch is among the ‘bank‘s most active and has a large Softball Enthusiast has Been Transferred to City been Bathut ronto, High School Meets Falls Here Friday "irst Home Fixture S S A. Hockey Should be Good s. Thompson, of the staff of the idian Bank of Commerce here, has transferred to the Queen and urst branch of the: Bank in Toâ€" o, it was learned this week. He cts to leave here about the 25th his month. Les has been one of most popular young men of the nunity and has taken an active 11 11 es played Points. mischâ€"Partenkirâ€" are conceded an squad are shown hows an action he little German Near the end of the period things began to warm up again and it was a slow play that made the first tally as Cattarello and Huggins combined. Cattarello got the goal. The next three Timmins plays saw Jack Young in the middle of them, doing most of the puck carrying. It was he who gave Lortie the pass for the final goal of the frame. Wilkes tried hard to tie it up before the bell rang and he had one fine opâ€" portunity to doing it. The young forâ€" ward was in on top of Esseltine when he lifted the puck right over the nt. Fiveâ€"All in Second The same Wilkes made up for the misplay at the opening of the second when he took the puck from his own blue line as he snared a Porcupine pass, marched through the whole team and scored, with just 45 seconds of the period gone. Lortie gave the crowd the lead it wanted a minute later when he and Lamoureux went down toâ€" gether. Leo passed @ut from the corâ€" ner and Lortie evaded his guard long enough to get the puck into the net. Lamoureax played what was without doubt his best game on local ice and he was just as valuable at checking as he was on helping to get the counâ€" fiveâ€"all tie and had one to spare in case Timmins made a comeâ€"back. The local lads put up one grand battle in that last period but they just eculdn‘t make the grade, even with Porkics two men short for a minute anq they came out on the short end of a 7â€"5 score. of a {â€"â€"5 score. It was without doubt the most exâ€" citing game of the season. Those twelve goals might sound like sloppy hockey but it was far from that. Play was extraordinarily fast and both Christianson in the Timmins net and Esseltine in the Porkies‘ had more than their share of work to do. The fans liked the hockey but were loud in their disapproval of the handling of the game. Norm Malloy with the bell did his very best to look after things, there‘s no question of that, but one man canâ€" not see everything that happens in modern forward passing hockey. He did miss plenty of penalties, but in the end it worked out an even break,. He didn‘t miss many offsides. Timmins Positions Altered The reâ€"arranged Timmins team was something of a surprise to the fans. Sparky Vail was moved up from defence to the right wing position on the spare line. Carson Miller, who came here as a defenceman, took the left wing in the same line. Joâ€"Jo Tremblay went back to spare defence, while and Greatrex were the regular guardians in front of Christianson, the goalie who has been making a name for himself in the Commercial league. The Laâ€" moureauâ€"Wilkesâ€"Fasano line remained unchanged and Jack Young retained his position at centre for the relief squad. Things looked bad at the beginning for the locals. A minute and a half after the puck was dropped, Mickey McCann, Eddie Malone and Woon crashed through ‘ ths: defence and Mickey sank one in the net. Greatrex took a penalty for overâ€"zealous body checking and while he was off Maki and McCann got in. This time the fair haired Maki did the scoring. Lortie did a great deal to keep the puck clear of the blue line for the rest of the time Greatrex was in the cooler and he and Jack Wilkes took a whirl at the South Enders while the team was still a man short. They just beat the Porkies on specd alone and Lortie took a neat pass for the first Timmins goalâ€"one that gave the lads a lot of heart. It was Forkies who forced the offâ€" side for a change of line. Vail started off like a professional and seemed to pair up with Jack Ycung to perfection. They couldn‘t get through to try Esséelâ€" tine. Maki and Cattarello had Chrisâ€" tianson doing the splits when they fired a barrage and the Timmins goalie kept the net clear nicely. Goal Face for Ragging Malloy called a faceâ€"off in front of the Porkies‘ net when Huggins raggâ€" ed the puck for a change of line the next time. Porkies took the puck when it was dropped. at bre Fans Stick by Their Team for Most Exciting Game Reâ€"Arranged Locals Show ( Frowns, â€" Final Score is 7 Here Last Night. Timmins im aifter ght to ct the end eak in t Timmins vs. _ lroquois Falls High and Vocational School Fri., Jan. 17 ,% TIMMINS ARENA nins hockey fans stuck with their and it was only a iter six straight losses up to last McCann was able to cheer them on to what looked shot a hard one end of the second period, like the, three feet off Chr in the bad luck, But Porkies]| McCann flashed in through in the third, broke the While Lortie w 1 tie and had one to spare in Woon MceCann ar \Admission H[OCKk ISVY p rreat Form but Lady â€"5> in Lightning Fast ( While Lortie was still in the box, Woon McCann and Taylor got in to give Porkies the lead again, less than a minute after the previous goal. Woon did the scoring. Wilkes made a real effort to tis it up again, but collided hard with Cyclione Taylor who was laid out on the ice for almost a minute. Carson Miller worked hard and was in twice for one of those "sure things." Christianson was worked hard as the Timmins team played far up ics.. He had to come well out of his net to save once when Huggins and Cattarello evaded their guards. Local hopes rose as Taylor was sent to box for slashing Wilkes. Porkies couldn‘t get the puck outside their own blue line for the next minute as Wiikes, Lamoureaux and Lortie batted down their attempted long shots. _ Huggins took a trip to the cooler for boarding Wilkes about a minute after Taylor and the whole Timmins team made frantic efforts to score. Porkies were more than frantic in stopping the atâ€" tack and it was only Esseltine‘s gréeat work in the nets that saved at least 3 goals. As Taylor came back, a long shot went down past centre ice, without a Timmins ‘man to pick it up. Christianâ€" son came out of his goal about 30 feet and it was only a matter of time till McCann was able to score. Maki had shot a hard one that bounded out about three feet off Christianson‘s pads and McCann flashed in to make it good. Dunn. who during the game was seen to hand out more than one butt end, was sent to the box for bodying Laâ€" moureaux and Timmins moved in. Vail and Tremblay worked together nicely and Joâ€"Jo it was who got the tieing goal on Sparky‘s pass from close by the néet. The Tirhmins system of letting Porâ€" kies come down to meet or four or fiveâ€" man defence was cast aside about this time and for the rest of the period it was a dingâ€"dong affair, with neither team able to break the tie. McCann Breaks Tie Porkies made a beginning in the third something like the one that characterâ€" ized Timmins‘ efforts in the second. McCann beat the whole team after two minutes by taking a rebound off the defence and giving Christianson a hard, kneeâ€"high shot. to fall on the puck before Taylor reachâ€" ed it. of minutes of play left. Those last two minutes were wild, although both teams kept their heads better than Timmins and Porkies usually do when they meet. Qras South Porcupin®:: goal, Esseltine; deâ€" fence, Dunn, Dent; centre, McCann; wings, Woon, Malone; spares, Huggins, Maki, Cattarello, Taylor; sub goal, Ginâ€" Timmins: goal, Christianson ; defence Lortie, Greatrex; ciontre, Lamoureaux wings, Wilkes, Fasano; spares Young Carson Miller, Vail, Tremblay. Referee: Norm Malloy, Schumacher First Period 11. Porcupine McCann t 2.18 12. Porcupine, Malone (MceCann) 17.1 sStops 1. Porcupine, Woon ) 2, Porcupine, 3. Timmins, 4, Porcupine, 5. Timmins, Penalty . Timmins, Wilkes (01.54 . Timmins Lortis (Lamoureaux) 1.45 . Porcupine, McCann (Maki) 6.33 . Porcupinge, Woon, McCann and Talylor) 723 . Timmins, Tremblay (Vail) 12.00 Fenaltiesâ€"Lortie, Dunn. Third Period Timmins goal Porcupine goal One Hour Skating After the Game High School Second Malon: (McCann, and 1.38 Maki (McCain( 3.21 Lortie (Wilkes) 4.45 Cattarello, Huggins 16.10 Lortie «Young) 17.10 atrex. Period r bodyving Laâ€" noved in. Vail ogether nicely got the tieing from close by > a real collided was laid ute. Luck iame 10â€"30 16~â€"41

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy