Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 4 Dec 1939, 1, p. 7

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+ e i . Sn e +000X * monte managed to get another goal out of flxe%crmnble to make the score three to nothing. It remained at that point until the ‘third period. Early in the third period Wflmott was tlhumbed but his absence made no difference to the Hollinger crew, which ‘by this time, was in full stride. Schreiâ€" ‘ber got: goai and assisted in aniother in less than minute, the first from a faceâ€"off near the Fiyers‘ net and the second when he passed to Palmateer. mzx m.:%u N (y H.A. Preparmg the Holiinger W’“W for Hockey Season the ove ‘to two: The Greenshirts played a'ide Deadline f o râ€" Enterin ‘â€" Delmonte speedily avenged the markâ€" erâ€"on the next play as a matter of fact. He rifled home Schréiber‘s pass and to add insult to injury Rene Lortie got tw more before the period ended. â€" Final goal of the game was scored for the Coniaurum by Dixon. The goal was scored when the puck rolled over Fargher’s stick. â€" . The.teams. Hollinger ‘Goal, Fargher; defence Btewart Miller; Schreiber;; wings, Palmateer,; Gordon; alternates, Cordick, Maig,â€"Dixon, Wilâ€" son, Dinelle, Wilmott, Lortie, Delmonte. Coniaurum : Goal, l-"orrester defence*‘ Kukkela, McCullough; centre, Butuers;, wings, Moorsehouse, Sahilote; alternates . Birkett, Dixon, Lewis, McArthur, Kerr Patterson, Plioplis, Luchyn. SUMMARY hm n io is apetn d ert s sls oo ts C Demonte took the rebound from shot from Lortie‘s stick to get the sixth goal for the Hollinger forces shortly Two Hollingér players were thumbed off the ice and the Plyers surged in on the weakened Greenshirts to get th2ir first goal. It came when Patterson fired the rubber at Fargher from close: in. He took the assist from Red McArthur. the. puck in behind him. After a minâ€" ute of strging Hollinger attacks Delâ€" McArthur, Kerr. the five minute mark in the first perfod: In the second period Hollinger cut loose and in just over a minute had added two goals to yhe list. While the :F!yers were up in the Hollinger end of the rink Dinelle broke through with the puck. He skated around the one deferxceman left to guard and drew Forrester cut of ‘his net and plunked While Kukkela was warminrg the bench in the pena@lty box for a bit of overâ€"enthusiastic play, Len â€"Sehreiber batted a fast pass over to Palmateer who was parked inâ€"front of the nets. Palmateer gave Forrester no opportunâ€" ity to stop. That goal came just over 6. Holunger. Palmateer (Schreiber).1. 14 6. Coniaurum, Patterson (McArthur) in the preâ€"season tourney recently. Sparring in the first period, the Holâ€" linger scored only one goal. They colâ€" lected two more in the second and outâ€" scored the Fiyers six to two in the final 1. Hoilinger, Palmateer (Schriebe®) _ MEA t io i e .. PB Penalties, Kukkela, Main. j Second Period 2. Hollinger, Dinelle ........................... 5.231 3. Hollinger, Delmonte .................... 6.53 Penalties, Schlote, Cordick, Gordon, 9. Hollinger, Lortie (Cordick, Dixon) ............................................... 1187 10. conigurum. DIXON ... 19.30 Penalties, Wilmott, Dixon, Main, Hollinger, Delmonte (Schreiber) ................................................ 1020 Homnger Lortie (Delmonte, Main) .......................... s 30. 00 ger Taste + Fruits of Victory in First Game of Mines! Power Still Heading Comâ€" ue Season. Swamp Contaurum Flyers Nine to Two! : mercial Bowhng League. felntyre Arena on Friday. Schreiber Ontstmdmg‘ ‘The Cummintertiat nowling league oo tihe Victors. . s ~â€" {pieted the first half of its schedule last PCR sedvie ies Third Period 10.07 Players Are Ready ‘The players, sounded out on the subject are players, sounded out on the team and not in favour, reportedly, of dropping out of competition for the season, the individual members flining up with the other clubs, if they could make the grade. New Liskeard and Cobalt would rather have a three team group than stage a duo on their own, and are reported as willing to acâ€" commodate Haileybury in the circumâ€" stances. § Hmit. One proposal heard had been that it might be possible to transfer one of the CobaltHaileybury games to New Liskeard and one of the New Liskeardâ€"Haileybury clashes to Cobalt, and this phase of the matter may be dealt with when representatives of the clubs meet soon.~ There is a possibility also the teams may operate an interâ€" town league,â€"the winner to advance into the N.OKH.A. playdowns as repreâ€" sentative of the Central Group. Members of Hafleybury Rotaz‘{y clubI had suggested the municipality arrafige for one large openâ€"air rink, with able. accommodation for hock*y playâ€" ers, but the town council held the probable cost of $500 would be too severe a strain on civic funds. Council will provide small rinks at the high,: separate and public schools, and also one ow vacant ground west of the T. N. 0. station, all an certain conâ€" ditions but these rinks while large enough to permit juvenile leazue games, will not be of a size sufficient to handle N.O.H.A. contests. | Deadline f o0 r . Entering Teams Only Two Weeks _ Away. Halleybury, Dec. 2.â€"With the deadâ€" line for entering teams and filing playâ€" ing certificates for the ensuing N.OKH. A. seazon only two weeks distant, plans are under way for the Central Group of the Assozsiation for this winter, and indications now are for the usual inâ€" tertown schedule involving Haileybury, Cobalt and New Liskeard teamis, alâ€" «though games will be played in the two latter centres only, since Haileybury will be without home ice for the season. Deprived of the use of the Armory A meeting is scheduled for the near future to have formalities completed { Weekâ€"End Hockey Scores as a war measure and with the town authorities disinclined,; on the â€"ground of economy, to finance one large openâ€" air rink for skatingz and hockey, it was intimated here yesterday that the group Junior champilons of last year are likely to stage all of their baettles with Cobalt in the renovated rink in the silver city and their duels with Neéew Liskeard on the Farmers‘ ice. Detroit News: The British actors of Hollywood are off to the war with the goodâ€" wishes of all and sundry. They leave. their accents in the care of the local talent, for the duration. oChicago 1 Toronto 3 Detroit 0 Canadiens 3 Americans 1 : Boston 6 oâ€"GOovertime. oToronto 3 oAmericans 1 N. H. Lâ€"Saturday Sunday Chicago 3 Rangers 1 | Tot@ls + .............. Power 4 points; McHugh John Doe Garner Hamiilton, Dec. 2.â€"Acting on the posâ€" sibility that the war may be over then, the British Empire Games committee of the Amateur Athletic Union is proâ€" ceeding with plans to hold the Empire Games in connection with Montreal‘s tercentenary celebration in 1942. Plan to Hold Empire â€" Games Despite the War iMontreal has provided the necessary financial guarantees, the A. A, U. of C. was told Wednesday by Dr. A. S. Lamb of Montreal, viceâ€"chairman of the games committee. All that is needed now is finanl approval of the central headquarters in England and a cessaâ€" tion of the war. : ‘"Nobody knows, of course, whether nostilities will be over, but we must conclude these preliminary plans," Dr. Lamb said. ‘The Advance, who were in the cellar, addeda two noints‘" at the expense of Gambles and got out ouf the pit by one Horrester Kirkland Cagers Train for Coming Court Sessions The eellas position which has changâ€" ed hands in the past three weeks was finglly nanded over to theâ€"T. :@. O, Pmm-wonthenntpiaeebymen points over Gambles. â€" Gomgintothehszma wlt.h'the T. N. 0. five points in the lead The wer added four more. f Nicolson G. S. Halter was returned as presiâ€" daent of the union as the annual union convention ended and all other officers were reâ€"elected. - The union made plans in its final session to protect the amateur status of soldier athletes during the war. Wailingford Juniors, champions oi their Central Gmpmdthe NOH.A. last winâ€" ter, are likely to operate again this gsemn and it is probable arrangements will be drafted to have them play all ! their ‘scheduled games with Cobailt in the rink at the Silver City and with "New Liskeard on the latter‘s home three of them at the public, separate . and high schools, respectively, and the fourth on vacant ground behind the T. N. 0. freight sheds. ‘The town wBi provide the lumber and assist in preparing the foundation and the preâ€" / finuinary flooding, besides giving assistâ€" ance in clearimg the ice if any parâ€" | ticularly heavy storms oecur during the winter months. The Rotary Club had | suggested providing one rink on the site | Haileybury Jnmors to: be Without fce Arena . In this town, particularly, where there are so many Finnish people, many of them with friends and relaâ€" tives still in Finland, feelinz against the‘Reds is slowly crystallizing into gomething more than dislike. It is more than likely that many of those who so openly and so proudly have. told us, in divers ways, of the glorles of the Soviet have had a revulsion of feeling. It is likely that Joe Stalin doublecrossed.them just as img one large open air rink on the *Mdmexpemewomdbetoomgh Instead, the municipal authorities are he has doublecrossed Finland. They, possibly.' really believed that Russia did stand for peace and progress. It is proâ€" bable even that many of them thought that the USSR., and its master, Bloody Joe, really. did espouse the It would be interesting to know just how many Communists, local and otherwise, have changed their mind about the US.SR. since the invasion of Finland. If any of them have they should come out and say so, because if feeling continues to rise, it is likely to be uncomfortable for Comrades in the near future. _ cahuse ‘of peace and democracy, and all of the other slogans that were tossed about so freely. It would seem thougn, that they must either have been most transâ€" parent dupes or else they approved of the Stalinist policy of taking any. means to the eventual end of warfare among classes, which is one of the fundamentals of dialectical materialâ€" â€" It is hard to imagine that a person, be he an armchair Red_or an active one,. could have had any faith in the personality of Comrade Joe himself. If they had they must have absolutely, ignored a mass of authoritive testimony in ths shape of books by reputable authors and of eyewitness accounts, that had been piling up over recent yeays. |\Blue Devils are Kirkland Lake, Dec. 2.â€"Lake Shore Blue Devils have been invited to play game in the new Dome Arena, which be opened to. the public on Decemâ€" i5 or 20. A definite opening dateé 0t been announced Manager Bill Brydge received the in« vitation at the hoekey meeting in Timâ€" mins on Tuesday evening and readily accepted. WThe Dome ice palace will rival all others in the North for beauty and ice space and will be the spot for all Porky games when it is opened. will ber has hockey competition by defeating Coniâ€" aurum 11â€"1 on Tuesday night. Other opening ceremonies are being arranged by the Dome officials and the Domeâ€"Lake Shore game will cap off scon as th exact opening date is known the Blue Devils will be informed. Conâ€" tractors have promised the arena for December 20, but it may be available the Friday before. _The teams were selected for The Canadian Fress by 24 coaches and sports writers in the senior football cities: of the East. The vote was "weighted" on the basis of the number of teams representing each city. Pick Only One O.R.F.U. Player for Star Team Eddie Thompson, Balmy Beach, Only O. R.â€"F. U; IP;Ieger Chosen ~ in : Press oll. Toronto, Dec. 2.â€"Little Eddie Thompâ€" son of the fiying feet crashed the top. of fiight of Eastern Canada‘s football allâ€"tars, but the rest of the first team was restricted to players from the Inâ€" terprovincial Union. . Thompson, whose running madeé To« ronto RBalmy Beach a constant threat in the Ontario Union, was voted to the allâ€"eastern first team along with five players from Ottawa‘s Big Four chamâ€" pions, five from Toronto Argonauts and Bill Davies of Montreal Royals. _ Isbister Dropped The second team, on the other hand, was restricted to players from the Inâ€" tercollegiate and Ontario Unions, with the exception of Bob Isbister of Hamilâ€" ton Tigers. The only difference beâ€" tween the first team and the Big Four allâ€"stars, announced two weeks ago, lay in the inclusion of FThompson and the dropping of Ishister. The main cogs in the powerful units , When the goalie fell for the ruse and that crashed headlong when Ottawas . came out of his net, Cooper skated to Rouzh Riders overthrew the Argos in! one side and slammed it hard into the the Big Four championsnip test at Toronto last Saturday were included in the first string. To round out a great allâ€"round machine there was the. swift endâ€"sweeping of Thompson and the deadâ€"earnest defensive play of . Perhaps the naming of Thompson left the first team without a great kicker, but Eddie himself or Tony Goâ€" lab. could handle the punting chore acceptably enough in a collection like this. No one in the OR.F.U. was near Thompson in yardage gained and in some quarters he has been regarded as the player of the year. The first team: Flying wing, Bill Davies, Royals; halves, Red Storey, Argos, Eddie Thompson, Balmy Beach, and Tony Golab, Ottawa; quarter, Bill Stukus, Argos; snap, George Willis, Argos; insides, Tiny Herman, Ottawa, and Len Staughton, Argos; middles, Bunny Wadsworth and Dave Sprazue, both of Ottawa; outsides, Bernie Fhornton, Argos, and Tony McCarthy,' Ottawa. Englishman into trouble though. Police outside the inn of Frank Roe, Weymouth, heard a cultivated English voice say "Come on, let‘s have one for the road." f . Pozzo Drifts Through Defence to. Score on Solo Effort Five Minutes Before End of Game. Macmen Score Upâ€" _ set Victory and Avenge Selves for Recent Loss. Only Two Penalties Awarded During Match. h } Beare stopped a penalty shot by Cyclone Taylor in the first period. The shot was awarded when the Mcintyre goalie held the puck too long. Beare was outstanding during the period, 'stopping several hard shots from Maki and Huggins. [ Half way through the second period Cooper deadlocked the score to climax . series of retaliatory MciIintyre rushes on the Dome net. He took the puck ‘from Lister while well out from the net, skated slowly in on Brownlee and feinted with his stick and the puck. ; When the goalie fell for the ruse and . came out of his net, Cooper skated to Macmen Take DomestersJnto . Camp;|By One Goal In First League Game On Friday â€"Night Porzo‘s goal in the last fiive minutes of the feature attraction in the doubleâ€" header which opened the 1939â€"40 hockey season at the McIntyre Arena on Friday night turned what looked like a deadlock into a 2 to 1 Mcintyre victory over the Dome. By the win the Macmen avenged themselves for a recent loss awarded them by decision of referees, in a game with the Dome. They also gave notice that hockey in the camp this year is not going to suffer for lack of competition between at least two teams in theâ€" loop. â€" The Macmen. did not get under way until the last two periods of the comâ€" bat on Friday but when they did start throwing attacks towards the Dome citadel Brownlee had a few anxious First goal was scored by the Dome with but a minute left to play in the first period while Milne, one of the two Macmen who received the only penalâ€" ties given, was off the ice. Buck Thomâ€" as scored when Mayes took his own reâ€" bound on a shot and passed it. Mayes broke through the defence and closed in on Beare. He drove one at the goalie from the side but the cagy Beare took the puck on his stick and flipped it right back to Mayes. Mayes passed it over to the other side of the net where Thomas was poised to receive it. He â€"scored. On the whole, however, the Dome goalie, Brownlee, was not kept as busy guarding his ramparts as was Beare in the home net. The South Enders lost the game but they displayed plenty of grive and .power which has made the Dome a force to be reckoned with in hockey circles here this year and last. Shortly after Cooper was panished from the ice for minor infringement. of rulés. While he was cooling his heels in the penalty box the Domesters applied the pressure but were not able to score.© Their rushing attacks often broke on theâ€"hard shoulders of Milne and Holoukka, on the McIntyre deâ€" fence. In the third period Beare was called on to make some spectacular saves against the fast, heady playâ€"making of the crack line of Nevins, Maki and Huggins. The big three bore down time one week from tonight, Bill Brydge, Lake Shore Arena manager. announc- ed yesterday. and again on Beare but always he managed to zet some part of his acro= batic anatomy in front of the fying During a Dome rush "Squirrel" Poszo picked up a loose puck and on a solo effort scored the goal which.gave the Macmen the victory. He needled his way through the deferice, shifted to bring Brownlee out flat on the ice and fiipped the puck into the goal.; The teams: Moclntyre, goal,. Beare? defence, Holoukka, .,ent.re Lisâ€" ter; wings, Lone, C:op:z; alternates, Richard, Pozzo, Lorraing, Somers. Baker, Murphy, Vail, Colquhoun. Dome, goal, Brownlee; defence, Tayâ€" lor, Mayes; centre, Maki; wings, Hugâ€" gins, Nevins;.alternates, Horne Woon, McCann, Thomas Cattarello, A. Hug- gins, McKay, Dunn. SUMMARY First Period 1. Dome, Thomas (Mayes) ...... ... 19123 Penalties, Milne. Te ' Ankerite Bisons May Meet Blue Devils on Friday 3. MciIntyre, Pozzo, Penalties, none. â€" Kirkland Lake, Dec. 2.â€"The Buffaloâ€" Ankerite hockey team winner of the Timmins Mines League last season, may play here in an exhibition game Blue Devil officials tried to get the for an exhibition game against the Blues tonight on their way. to Sudâ€" bury for a game with the Miners there tomorrow night, but the tour apparentâ€" ly has bsen called off and. will be scheduled for next week, accogding to information received here. * ‘Nggo't_iations @re continuing between the two clubs and a definite answer should be known by Monday. _Profidâ€" ing the game with the Timmins team is arranged, tickets will go on sale earâ€" ly next week. As usual, all seats will Game in Liake Shore Arena, Kirkland Lake Now Being , Planned. be reserved. Try The Agavance Want .Advert,lsements. Second Period . MciIintyre, Cooper (Lister) Penalties, Cooper. Third Period PAGE BEVEN 9.07

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