Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 4 Apr 1938, 1, p. 7

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an 0j anyb The : LWO 1 Mercantile Bowling Trophy Won By Shaheen and David Defeated Harkness in Finals Played at South Porcupine In ; Porcu; Dowell in the rinks w President‘s Cup At this time it appears Jamieson and Arscott will final match in the Presic Skip event, which has also ing fire for some time. It : Saturday that the two rink the semiâ€"finals of the not decide a winner. It required four hours of Stevens‘ Bowling Alleys last We night for Shaheen and David‘ th2 Mercantile Bowlinz Leagu pionship, defeating Herman‘s b of 185 points. The title was de the total points for six games. Herman‘s won the first ga jumped into a lead of 211 noint heen and David‘s had to win four games to oversome thi and walked intc the deciding the night with a lead of 52 poi The last game was a bitterly ed affair, the lead changing fr to the cther, the final result b m doub: at the cighth box. and David‘s came through wit] erful finish to pass their oppon: take the game by 133 points. rolled the highest score of « game, 314, while Sauve led :th for total score with 1511. Shaheen anrd David‘s Two Rinks Battle Hard in Curling Nigcht. Decision in Doubt all the Jamieson and Arseott Will Play for Winners Drop First Game by 211 Pins but Win Next Five Straicht to Take Championship. Decision in Doubt Unâ€" til Last IEwo Frames of Final Encounter. Don McNabb tal 655. Jert 148, 2 120 191 â€" A. Sauve Total 1511 Sam Da Lou GOOC â€"Total 137 Bob Web! =~‘Total 127 MOKNDAY. APRITL 4714 TEMISKAMING AND NORTHERN ONTARIO RAILWAY Trains 219 â€"220, leaving Cochrane 9.30 a.m. arrivâ€" ing Island Falls 12.20 Leaving Island Falls 1.00 p.m. arriving Cochrane 3.50 p.m., each Thursday, will be cancelled. McM Dutt McD K. Ha Iâ€"Total 1340. H. Shephardâ€"304, 209, 211, 300 14986. A. Ansara Total 1095¢ LAST.TRLLP Thursday, April 7, 1938 NOTICE Campbé To ne lead Cchanging iITrom r, the final result being still | + the cighth box. Shaheen : ga s came through with a powâ€" z m. to pass their opponents and aime by 133 points. Sinclair ' hichest. saore sSingle 4 «4 mâ€"6379. Herman‘s . 168, 188, 115â€"Tota â€"399" %4505. 211. 204, rEcott will play of the President‘s ° t‘h has also been h e time. It appeart he two rinks, who of the «t+ 4# 4 31 196. 206 43. 249. 231,; 185 179. 160, 148 276. 303, 233, 236 *A . . PAKK 193, 243 @ist Wednesday d the crow is defic 116 contestâ€" om team Stevens Demeza 246 4 a to win chamâ€" a total 1€ Masonic Orchestra Heard At Bridge Event on Frid M 1 gaVv the saved cnd h so he w In any May men before Cl oppone Here Alfie d two pi us was strike the 1 pi What the dout His pat ay the To r The e «d4id ilast we od, and thank Th mmetr Owing il Army ¢¥. Bowl Along sCGay M r ko WE of Il Y MA 1€ ACc hn C Playâ€"Off Saturday Way. Doubtful if President‘s Cup. eam with a€ h6 Y 1"79, 150, im â€"6194 e saved the day for Gamâ€" t half, and the T. N. O. The Advance in the sstâ€" ninetyâ€"day no Promise Me." 1¢ 1e ba nd finish, or was it? e compliments Gambles ance. the latter thanks e Advance in the seeâ€" big catch is: Who is he day for both teams )â€"morrow night? will have Bill in their ; missed very few games startea and can always schind the fruitiers. He ipport>r of the printers, o toss the coin toâ€"night. will be sitting behind icke M pare mage Eaxr bal all IOr LNne J and J nt into the pit, and up ‘bobbed a pin to for a soare. AI ist Tuesday were: tin. â€" He forgot to made a doubleâ€" It was only his stopped him. wouid describe it: 1, making a strike, to the next alley, and 5 pins, and around for the 1 nent‘s ball struck s present. initial appearâ€" rchestra, which fter the bridge at bridge were: Nankervis; 2nd, ind consolation, 1‘s$ iIst, Mr. J; T. ‘lose to breaking or a single in the e printers. They orm for the first half, and are rware, which will m toâ€"morrow. being torn down, â€"o6ffs in this serâ€" the highest points out the one and the boys if they made. The chorâ€" I‘ll show you!" for the 3 and 5, the alley. Had Alfie made â€"To make the ers more pleaâ€" as installed a ed in banking of music is to r of the San nks that the 7 note should evening er of m out for the p going team bowled ind consoâ€" can suure 155, 174 in the Police Juvenile Team Will Challenge For Hepburn Cup Trophy Offered by Ontario Premier is Goal of Local T. P. A. A. A. Team. Claim That Southern Ontario Winners Should Come North or Lose Championship by Default. Indications today were that Inspector Art Olson who has all the confidence in the world in his juvenile team that won the local N.O.H.A. group, will go on and challenge the southern Ontario winner to a series for the Hepburn Cup, which is now in TIroquois Falls. The Falls didn‘t enter the Juvenile series this year but the cup is availâ€" able for competition. The silverware was offered by Premier Mitchell Hepâ€" burn is emblematic of the juvenile championship of the province. TIroquois Falls won the cup last year with the team that this year advanced to Junior "B" rating and it is contended that the Southern Ontario winner should either come North to play for the cup or lose by default. If and when series is arranged,. the games will be played at Lake Shore arena in Kirkland Lake., Gambles cauld not get going in their game against the and turnâ€" ed in a poor score. Gagnon and Tait had an off night. Henry was also terâ€" rible in spite of calling them. The stags: is now all set for toâ€"nighft, and don‘t forget it is soven O‘clock sharp as there is another team playing off at 9, so give them a chance to get the alleys. The printers are indebted to the gentleman of the United Cigar Store who has relieved Alfie during the seaâ€" son to play for them. It was decided that The Advance meet T. N. O. and Gambles roll them with Power in the first game in the eup play on April 7. Hiâ€"ho! Hiâ€"ho! It‘s on a hike we go! Talalala . .. lalalala . .. What is it? Now don‘t try and tell me that you haver‘t heard that song over the And don‘t try to tell me that it doesn‘t make you want to get out hiking. The hiking song of} Walt Disney‘s ‘"Seven Dwarfs Patrol" has just made me ittch all the miore to get out for I know there‘s hiking to be done. You will remember that last week I urged you all to "Be Prepared." Preâ€" pared for anything that might happen in our Jamboree. I can think of no better way to gain that "preparedness" than through hiking. Our local Jamâ€" soree will require troops to camp as patrols; each patrol being a complete camp unit in itself. In competition, your type of kitchen, your layout, your purpase may give the hike its name, such as:â€"Nature Hike: for collections, etc.; Scoutcraft Hike: animal tracks and plaster casts, or follow a trail left by other Scouts; Compass smack through the country with nothing to guide you but your compassâ€"a real test gadgets, your equipment, your tent, or shelter, will all count toward your paâ€" trol becoming successful and repreâ€" senting your troop in the Northern Ontario Jamboree. Anad _ of course, equipment that you have designed and made yourselves will count more than those things which you can easily proâ€" cure. How else are you going to find out just what you will need, if it‘s not by trying them ON A HIKE? "Be Prepared."‘ That goes for hiking, too. And to be prepared your outfit must be just right and your training sufficient. Then. a sturdy and sharp knife, a piece of strinz and a few matches will come in handy. Besides, you should alâ€" ways carry a small note book and a pencil in your shirt pocket. The rest of the outfit depends upon the kind of hike you are taking. You should always hike with a purpose. The goal may be your favourite camp site, a hilltop, a lake, a beach. The As to the personal outfit for the hike, ! there‘s nothing to beat the Scout uniâ€" form. That‘s what it was designed for. The shorts and the rolled sleeves leave | the blood circulating unhampered and permit the air to flow freely around the limbs, hardening the skin and stimulating the pores. If it looks like‘ rain you will take a poncho or rainâ€" coat; and if you are in for a cold spell, a sweater or other warm clothing. f BOY SCOUTS IN TIMMINS THE PORCUPINTE ADVANCT, TTMMINS, ONTARIO OxXFORD DEFEATS CA MBRIDGE IN ROWING CLASSIC of Scouting. Signal Hike: everything instruc{isd by Morse or Semaphore even in sealed instructions. with cameras, for a Hike, or pads and pencils for a Sketching Hike, and last but not least an Exploration Hike to find out what‘s what in some place you‘ve never been. bappet vere‘s a patrol meeting hint. Try some tincan craftâ€"make some improâ€" vised pots and plants out of tins and pieces of wire. Show that you are preâ€" pared to hike! : Has anybody got any picture of their Troop or Pack, old or new? If you have, would you let me have a copy for an and loz of the Timmins Scouts and Cubs. Send them up to E. B. Rowe, 40 Patricia Blyvd., or give them to your leader. Timmins‘ largest Scout Troop is No. 8. I was down there the other evening‘ to a rezular meeting to find an attenâ€" dance of about 32 boys. The Scouter, Mr. Gorrard Pelletier, told me that, Thursday evening‘s attendance was about average but that several of the boys were sick. At present they are planning a concert for early in May to raise funds to help them go to camp this summer. After Lent the Troop will resume its Friday evening meetings, in St. Charles School. Plans are laid to form the £th Timmins Group among the Ukrainian boys. It is hoped that the new group will get under way early this month. YÂ¥our Hobby: Nature Casts. Projects: Leaf casts, twig casts, casts of tracks. Material: Plaster of paris, "Plasteâ€" sine." "Plastelins" or "Plasticum." Procedure: For leaf or twig casts, take some "Plastesine" and flatten it on a board. Then carefully lay leaf underside down in the position desired, lay sheet of paper over and rub thorâ€" oughly with the tips of fingers to make dsep impression. Remove paper and l>af. Print name of lear or any other information in the clay backwards as though you were seeing it in a mirror. Next build a wall of "Plastesine‘" around the negative to form the mold ; Mix plaster, slowly sifting the ‘plaster into water. It will sink to the bottom of the dish. When it rises above the water level just slightly you have suffiâ€" cient plaster. Now stir thoroughly. It should be about the consistency of thick cream. If too much plaster has been put in., it can be ‘thinned with water. A pinch or so of alum will cause the mixture to become harder. Don‘t leave your mixture in dish too long after using, as it is difficult to reâ€" move, Pour plaster ints the leaf impression. In about twenty minutes the cast will be hard enough to remove. When you can tap it fairly hard with your finger nail without a dent in 4t, it is rsady. Remove "Plastesine" wall and life off cast. If it sticks, carefully inâ€" sert a blade under the edge. After trimming it neatly with a knife, leave Track casts are madz from animal or bird tracks found in the ground. Choose the best track you can find. Place a ring made of a strip of cardboard and a clip around it, or use an impression of the lip of a cup as border. Pour plaster of paris into the ring to sufâ€" filcient thickness of cast. Leave for twenty minutes Wash in running water. By making an impression with cast in plastesine a mold may be made that can be used for producing 6ther casts in the form of letter weights, boaok ends, etc. it until dry, then paint with water eolours, or show card coloure. (Note: This is the last of Your Hobby serias, as other hobbies are a little too difficult to describe without illustration or demonstration. For the most part, the hobby suggestions have been taken from "Handbook for Patrol Leaders" â€"a valuable bandbook for any Boy Scout Leader.) "Toâ€"day is the toâ€"morrow yOuU worâ€" ried about yvesterdayâ€"and it did not Woodstock Sentinelâ€"Review: A writer in Belleville Intelligence makes timely comment upon the prevalence of proâ€" fanity among youns people. At that, however, they may not be starting so young as in the bygone days, for we read in Scripture that Job cursed the day he was born. mitingly yours, Ebr. District Leader Boxing With Fred Apostoli defeating CGlen Lee last Friday in a fifteen round deâ€" cision, he should be matched wiih Freddie Stzele to sett‘s the middleâ€" weight championship. Apostoli has alâ€" ready beaten Steele in a nonâ€"title bout Over 15,000 pseople witnessed the Aposioliâ€"Lze fight in New York. Before 12,000 onlookers in Chicago Stadium Joe Louis toyed with Harry Thomas, but his prediction was out, for Joe said he would finish Thomas in the third round, but it was the fifth, owing to a fluke, for in the third Joe had his man ouwi.. With ten seconds to go Joe kolted his man to Harry‘s corâ€" ner and had him at his mercy, but for the fiuke, for amid the roar of the crowd it was thought the gong had gzone and Harry‘s seconds shoved the chair under Harry, and Joe walked to his corner only to hsar the gong go afterwards. Louis® handlers asked for the fight, but the officials ruled it to gc on. crow from left uo righ C Cherry, K. D) Bu H. M. Young and J. L Hockey The Stanley Cup playâ€"offs have never surpriscd the hockey fans as they have done this year. The majority picked Boston to win with the Rangers a close second; both got knocked out. Then came the clash between the Americans and Chicago, and if anybody had said the Black Hawks would be the finalists a month ago you would have said "there‘s a building on the Hamiltcon The first couple of games will take place in Chicago starting tomorrow night.. W.G.N. will bring you the third, if not more of these games. It was back home for both Sudbury teams over the weekâ€"end, when Oshawa "there‘s a building on the Hamilton M»untain for such cases." Thero is ons more surprise in store, and I hesitate to say that the game little team from across the border will take the cup, but don‘t be surprised if they do. L WRAS DaCchKk I10IIIC teams over the weekâ€" clamped down on th Cornwall d@efeated t It must have been an exciting race betwe>n Oxford and Cambridge in the Thames yearly classic which went to the heavier crew, Oxford, by two lengths. Cambridgs won the toss and chose the Surrey side, which was the calmest, but the dark blues showed better speed against the head wind and pulled away from their rivals. This rac> started in 1829 but only 90 World‘s Sport Events | COL t have been an exciting race Oxford and Cambridge in the vearly classic which went to (By F.J.H.) Titâ€"Bits n ; PLANAR FRONT WHEEL y EN ATIC HILL HOLDER * SAFETY Bopy_ AUTOMOMY oF OVERDRIVE AND FRAM oj; ‘;_col‘*cflc)N sTEERING * HORIZONTA;», _gCT-‘i â€"smNT FLOORS * FULL SIXâ€"PAce, 1€ juniors 4â€"2 seniors by «» Louis Defeats Harry Thomas In Fifth Round By Knockout and the razes have been recorded, Cambridge | 1g7 kaving won 47 while Oxford 42 inâ€" cludinz Saturday‘s race, and one a T dead heat. The time for Saturday‘s | the race was 20 minutes, 32 seconds. The i pree record for the 4‘ mile course is held | 4: by Cambridge, 18.03. in While their fellow students went down to defeat in the morning the Cambridge rugger team took on an allâ€" star toam from New York and trounced them 38 points to 6. Champion Bomber Flattens His Opponent After Two Minâ€" utes and Fifty Seconds of Fifth Round. First Time Thomas Knocked Out in Eighty Fights. Lowuis Ready for Schmeling. Heavyweight Champion Joe Louls, the unsmiling executioner, laid away his fistic bombs Saturday after a fifthâ€" round knockout of couragsous Harry Thomas and began to dream of the June night when he hopes to avenge his defeat by the only man who laughâ€" ed at his prowess and made it stickâ€" Max Schmling. Stung by the fury of the challenger‘s consiant, Gangerous flailing, Louis stunned Thomas with a left hook beâ€" hind the ear at the end of the third Thomas, an awkward but rugged heavyweight from Minnesota, had all the heart of Schmeling but the boxing ability wasn‘t there. round, dressed him for the kill by flocoring him four times in the fourth round and ended it with two merciful left hooks after another knockdown in the fifth. STAR TRANSFER CAREFUL SERVIC E MOVING ? " THE YELLOW FLEET " an Take It! Oxford Boat Crew Win Historic Race Oxford, for the second sucscessive vear, won the annual boat race with Dark Blues won by two lengths, never head, on Saturday. Cxford‘s time was 20 ~minutes, 30 soeconds, compared to tho record of 18 minutes, three seconds,»set by Camâ€" bridge in 1934 for the fourâ€"mile, 374â€" bridge in vard "Sâ€": D* recent | wi‘lness ;T t time mlullt Toronto T many want peace that ; A W It was Oxford‘s second successive ctory after 13 consecutive defeats, d the Dark Blues‘ 42nd triumph since e classic was inaugurated in 182%0. imbridge have won 47 races; one,<in held off ; Cambridge m ay to win. C at the finish. t was Oxfor course ncoul ‘nt years ma ness the the morning $â€"shay Dark | 10( Telt dead heat. Million Watch: $ of a million people lined hours before the race. In ; many have been unable to race because it was held ning. â€" The later starting the Saturday halfâ€"holiday coâ€"day‘s crowd. DQOR @" course. Les took the lead at the ‘ a determined challenge midâ€"way, and then dreéew Cambridge appeared all pea im :â€"Hitler says Gerâ€" se. It must be the all understanding. meond â€" successive PaAcE SEVEN

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