Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 12 Feb 1940, 1, p. 7

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

§S\\\\\S\S“\‘S\S\S\§S\S\\S§$‘ McINTYRE ADMISSION ADULTS 50c CHILDREN 25c MCINTYRE ARENA .I. H \ X 1‘ ,..,.\\ , ..,i..,./, E . ffiggfi’fé’gvn Just as the bell went. to end the period Gordon anzl Ccaper were en- gaging in a fight but it was stopped. At the four minute mark in the second period the team of Somers and Richard got its first on 'a beautiful play which» outspeeded the back- cheeking 'Houinger forwards and saw- Somers alone inside the Hollinger blue line. Four minutes later Richard picked up a loose puck and banged it at Farg- her. Farg‘her stopped but Somers came in fast and slapped the rebound into the net for the third McIntyre goal. Gordon and Cooper. who had sparred earlier in the game. broke out into open The McIntyre had a tense few min- utes when first, Murphy was sent off for tripping S'ch-reiber, and then when he returned to the ice, Bowman was immediately thumbed. They managed to avert a scoring play, however. until the end of the period when Wilson took a pass from Stewart. Macmen and Hollinger Play To Overtime Tie in Crucial Contest 011 Saturday Night Checking was hard in the early part of the first period and the first goal did not come until the seventeen mark when Schreiber task the disc from a fa-ceoofi' and raced away with it. The goal was scored while Stewart. the Hollinger's own man. was 011‘ the ice Thirty seconds later the score was tied The speedy Murphy taok a fast pass from Lorraine and planted the rubbet behind Beare. A few minutes after it was scored Stewart was banished {or using the butt end of his stick injudiciousiy. The Macmen drove hard during the time Stewart was off the ice but were unable to get one past Fargher. Stand-out team during the evening was that of Somers and Richard. This pair swooped down on the Hollinger goal early in the second for the pair of consecutive counters which gave the Mel-omen an edge. Kirkland Lake Curlers Sweep T S7. N. O. Bonspiel “- .â€"-â€"_â€"â€"â€" -.â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"-â€"> w~~.â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€" -_Dâ€"â€" WWWâ€"“o“-gâ€"m .â€".4 w” win and had their eyes play-011' berth, where the only one, they were n1 many chances aft-er the deadlocked. Neither the MCI! linger Greemhirts z Saturday night’s £81 have mea the {our 3 neither t4. minutes 01 ended in a Each tea Each team tallied in the initial period and in the second the Macmen scored two consecutlve goals and it looked like curtaltlls for the Greenshlrts. How- ever, the Hollinger crew hitched up its suspenders and went to work to regain the pair. One goal was scored in the dying seconds of the middle canto and another early in the third. For fifteen minutes cf the third period and ten minutes of overtime both teams battled to break the Lie but it. was useless. Although the two squads were out to Neither Team Could Afford to Lose 80 Neither Does. Each Team Scored in First. Macmen Take Two Goal Lead in Second and Hollinger Catch Up. Both Squads Play Careful Game After Score is Deadlocked. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 12TH, 1940 Detroit Holzbaugh (O -\(.‘ HFD BY STE“ EV ANS \\\‘\\\ DOME vs. SCHUMACHER VV‘ 11“: I‘ .- 1‘ Mt‘hIItwrxv A SVS‘V“ EXHIBITION; th m - DOUBLE / a: HEADER Friday, Feb. 16th JI’NI’OR “A" Holzhaugh is leading the Michigan-Ontario League team na Luads were out to es fiked on that there is room for not taking too the score was 5 a 1035 would from one of Accordingly. After seventy nor the H31- warfare again a aflord to 1352 given a well tr 8.30 p.111. 7.15 pm. ame VS. Globe an'd Mailzâ€"Prcbably when the history of the war is written it will ap- pear that Russian parachutes had less significance than Mr. Chamberlain’s umbrella. On Wednesday the b: visited by the donor of the George W. Lee, who came Bay for the event. One of the features of the T. N. O. bonspiel Wis the number of upsets which occurred when rinks which were favoured to go well into the semi-finals and finals were put out of the different com-petitions by “dark horses." An- other was the outstanding performance of the “kid" rink skipped by J. H. Leach of Siscoe. The Leach rink got to the fourth round ‘ play for the Lee trophy and was beaten out only by the rink which eventually won the cup. the rink skip- ped by Davis, of Kirkland Lake. In the Power trophy play the Leach rink got to the third round and there was beaten out by the eventual winner. D-oggett, of Kirkalnd. “Kid Rink” Does Well in Bonspiel at Haileybury Feature of Play Was Many Upsets Which Occurred Throughout Week. Penalties: Murphy, Bowm: Arthur, Cooper, Gordon. Third Period 6.-â€"~Hollinger. Lortie (Dinelle) Penalties: Milne, Wilmott. Richard Stewart_ Colquhaun. Gordon, Cooper. SeOOnd Period 3.-â€"McInvtyre. Somers (Richard) ....4.2£ 4.â€"â€"-«Mclntyre, Somers (Richard) M 8.4C 5.~â€"Hollinger, Wilson (Stewart) ._.19.4( Penalties: Murphy, Bowman. Mc- Hollinger: goal, Fargher; defence, Lortie, Delmonte; centre. Schreiber; wings, Palmateer, Gordon: alternates, M-cArthur, Wilson. Kerr. Dinelle, Wil- mottv, Dixon, Miller. Stewart. given a well - deserved misconduct penalty. Lox-tie took a pass from Dinelle inside the McIntyre blue line to get the dead- locklng goal. The game went into overtime but no decision was declared. The teams:â€" McIntyre: goal, Beare; defence. Milne. Bowman; centre. Murphy; wings. Lister. Lorraine; alternates. Cooper. Somers. Richard. Mann. OBrien. Colquhoun. Lorraine; alter Richard, Mann Vail, Holoukka Off icia grave. l.-â€"'Hollinger. iSchreiber . .17.00 2.-â€"'McIntyre, Murphy (Lorraine) 17.30 INTERMEDIATES F'red Clarke and Jerry Le- SUMMARY F irst Period his ti: :erved ime were eac] :1 mlsconduc vnspiel was Lee trophy, from North “4.25 8.40 19.40 M:- 5 .35 3% Weék- End Hockey Scores I Monarchs: goal. Scunson; defence, Smith, Miller; centre. Bucknam; wings, Burns. Dysart; alternates. Gowen, Mesâ€" sett, flutchinson, Gagnon. Andrews, Smith. Huggins. “W; m to open one of your letters.” replied the child. South Porcupine, Feb. 10â€"(Special to The Advance)-â€"D3me juniors de- feated the Monarchs five to nothing in the South Porcupine Arena on Thurs- day night. Cossick was one big reason for the Dome team‘s success. He got three of the five counters. The other scorers were Brown and Louis. The teams:â€" Dome: goal, Lone; defence. Pirie, Turcotte, Capyk; centre. 0 Mara; wings. Harris, Louis; alternates, Cossick, Doran, Brown. Tessier, Ianerelli. “Bobby," he asked. “what, does it mean when steam comes out of the spout of the kettle?“ Dome Juniors Win Five to Nothing Against Monarchs Total Guinanardo Hornby . Guidice Bonnah , Wallingford McQuam‘e Towers ..... Berardini Webb ...... Salomaa Total Total ............ , ..... 776 94,1 Gambles 2 points; T. N Power McQuarrie ., 147 225- Towers ............... 191 207 Armstrong Cloutmer _ Fleming .. Leach . .. N Saint, ....... Gardner .. Total Gagnon Moss Lambert Tait ...... Nicolson Horester Gambles picked up another point to get closer to the printers for second place by taking two from the T. N. O. Losing the first by 322 pins, the railâ€" roaders came back to take the next two by narrow margins. Kirkland HS. to Meet Kapuskasing For Hockey Honours Advance Still Holds Second Place in the Series. The Power strengthened their lead in the Commercial Bowling League last Friday by taking three points from The Advance. The first was an easy win for the electricians by 138 pins. The second went to the printers with 13 pins, and the third was also close with the electricians nosing out the print- ers in the last frame for 55 pins. Power Strengthens Lead in Commercial Bowling Contest Kirkland Lake. Fab. 1-0. -â€" Kirkland Lake High and Vocational School’s in- terscholasac hockey team, comprised wholely 3f Juveniles. will meet Kt pus- kasing Polar Bears in the Northern paper tcwn tavmght in a sudden-death game for the Northern 59:“ an honours cf the N¢O.S.'S.A. circuit. Lazk of funds in both camps necessi- tated the one game championship ser- xes between the two teams. The winner will meet the champions in the New Liskeard-chalt-Haileybury district for Northern Ontario honours. Kapuskasmg will be greatly strength- ened by the use of all Junior players in school up there. As there is no Junior NBA-IA. body in the paper town all the Kap Juniors are eligible for the school team. Last week the Polar Bears de- feated Cochrane High School by a wide margin. and are listed as heavy favor- ites in the North to take the Kirkland visitors in the sudden-death tussle. The team representing Kirkland Lake will be entirely Juvenile. A N.O.S!5.A. ruling .prohibits the use of sch-301 juniors who play organized hockey. The local team will leave here Sunday afternoon and return home on Tuesday. Arrangements between the Kapuskas- ing-Kirkiand Lake winner and the Clay Belt representative will be completed some time next week. N. n. L.--SATURDAY oToronto 4 Rangers 1 .. 801 1016 war 3 points; Advance What It Meant SI'NDAY 939 1 Advance . 170 125 . 180 _. 167 . 159 Gambles , 220 . 210 _ . A182 221 . 265 1098 159 195 247 176 149 201 154 96 Canadians Americans Rangers 1003 253 210 150 192 211 207 218 205 148 125 189 260 161 890 206 198 186 152 217 137 1045 2862 1 point. 888 2605 0., 2 points 1100 197 151 204 296 192 214 236 180 228 242 N.O.S.S.A. S of sch-sol { hockey. ° strength- players in no Junior 'wn all the ' 183 190 '1 69 128 213 87 215 124 203 203 THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE. TIMMINS. ONTARIO 304:2 2820 572 674 604 5'77 431 557 628 586 5‘14 533 289 595 611 458 64 1 402 203 curve Dome . ‘ Pamour Ankerite Hollinger McIntyre I’m told the children were flinging round lumps ‘ Cf a strange soft white stuff they call . . And folks were foreseeing a prospect of. What that is of course, I dont know. The London “Daily Mail" finally ~pub-' lished a poem which, it said, had been held up for ten days, finally to be passed with alterations. - There was much more of the same thing, but because the weather is an official secret. the censor-fearing Briâ€" tish papers carried not a line. If a person was dependent upon the news- papers for his knowledge 0f- the weather he would not have had the slightest inkling that s‘nowdrifts 12 feet high were piled up on the Dover- Folkestone Road; that Scottish lochs were frozen solid and that all Britain shi vered . What happened to transportation was even worse. The “Irish Mail” from cHolyhead was announced “still on its way" _24 hours after it was due in Waterloo Station. At. Euston station three trains from the north failed to him up for more than a day. Exchanges-A lot of auto wrecks 'ult from the driver hugging the WI The only Blitzkreig which has struck Britain so far has been that of the elements. Now that it all is over the censors are allowing newspapers to say something about the Storm. the worst seen on the Island for 46 years. The hushâ€"hush boys have relaxed their vigilance and the English news-papers are allowed to say that all REF. leaves were cancelled; tha: the public was ex- horted to exercise every economy in the use of fuel; the stores were shy of fresh meat. Heinrich Himmler. Nazi Gestapo chief, has called God to time. he has. in fact, reprimanded the Almighty very severely. At the same time Ger- marzy has. by Himmler's order. 135; a slogan that survived the last war and lived to be revitalized for this one. The slogan was “Gott strafe England.” Said Himmler in his sexy, Jew-hating sheet "1335 Schwarze Kai-p5" (The Blank Guard,: “11‘ God on whom the Germans called in vain 25 years ago was really capable of exercising such a measure of punitive, power, He would rot have waited until 1940 to punish the British. In those days the Germans relied too much on the power of higher justice and too little on the holy wrath of the nation fighting for its existence. “Slogans such as this derive from a mental attitude which is all too fatal- istie and all too-lazy. . . If He were really a practical God who would see to it that law and order prevail, He would have said to Himself long since: I have made things hard for the Ger- mans long enoughâ€"now they will finally have some good luck. And in like vein: The British have irritated Me long enoughâ€"now they will learn what trouble is.” No doubt the First Cause will take this reprimand from Heinrich to heart and begin to mend 'His ways. Blue Devils Take Copper Kings by 3 Score of 13-0 practically every member of t er machine had a hand in, at goal. S:oring points soared : of 20 marks were picked u baker's dozen total of goals. mum: Lake. 1 est display of an those same Devi Beavers 27-0 last day mg first sh} count. Led by b) counted for bombarding 'Blu anda Ccpper Ki O .0 M a O A .0 o o I”. o c“:” .n‘w'u'u‘oo’ O '- o o .0 0O '0 O. OOO‘OO0:ODQOO~OOOOOQ I o o o o o o o o a o o o - ‘1 00. o 0 00 9000. n .00! o oooozo‘uooooo.ooo o u . D C . . . . How They Stand SIFTING THE NEWS c‘pper King at Lake Sh It-Ou By Hugh Murphy bur goals a very memb 1d Dick Kowcinak. who ac aur 23315 and three assists. MJGHT AS Shore Arena on Thurs- 1 they marked up their the season by a 13â€"0 stain-3d power 3111:: .s defeated Toburn spring. Like Shane's «Devils blasted Nor- 3 Out. of the hockey ore Arena on Thurs- 46 44 45 33 43 as he Bamb- 19 23 44 41 44 53 as re- {19 p- 1;) 13 13 The teams:â€" Schumacher: goal. Lang; defence, Maddock, Denny; centre, Schlote; wings Byers, Moorehouse; alternates. Gordie-k, Green, Haggerty, Ianerelli. Pamour: goal, Chenier: defence, Cameron, Scott; centre. Scantland; wings, McChesney, Myers; alternates. Pamour: goal, Chenier: Cameron, Scott; centre. wings, McChesney, Myers: Lanscombe, Delornee, Miller Pamour Drops Tilt t0 Schumacher on Thursday Night South Porcupine, Feb. latâ€"(Special to The Advance) â€"- Schumacher Inter- mediates defeated Pamour 5 to 1 at South Porcupine .on Thursday night in one half of a double-header bill at the South Porcupine Arena. North Bay Nuggetâ€"Japan finds it very annoying that Great Britain, the United States and France are inter- fering in China . . . and the Chinese are the worst of all. With three goals Moreh-ause was the stand-out player of both teams. ByeI'S. Who also got an assist. on one of More- house‘s goals, got the fourth and Green counted. Myers scared for the Pamour. Downing, New Liskeard, won Gould, Haileybury. Ruttan, New Liskeard won Leach, Siscoe. Abrams, Kirkland Lake, won Doggett, Kirkland Lake. " Hawley, Kirkland Lake. won Richmond, Dame. Semi-Final Round McChesney won frcm Smith. Burrows won from Ridden. Final Burrows won from M-cChesney. PURITY FLOUR TROPHY Third Round Stephenson, New Llskeard. won from Smith, ‘Sauth Porcupine. Miller, Naranda, won erm Leach. Siscoe. Neelands. Kirkland Lake. won from 'Boyd,.Kirk1and Lake. Isherwcod, Haileybury won from Rinn, Timmins. ‘McChssney, Kirkland L Lickley. New Liskeard. Smith. Sauth Porzupix McKnight. New I 'skrzavd Burrows. North Bay, w: ran, Kirkland Lake. Ridden, Kirkland Lak Herman. Timmins. Final Davis won f-ram Isherwood. CANADA NORTHERN POWER Fourth R's-and Charron. Kirkland Lake, won fr Burrows, Narth Bay. Thompson. Kirkland Lake. won fr Herman, Timmins. Semi-final Round Abrams won from Sutcliffe. Ramsay won from Hudson Final Abrams won frcm Ramsay. Semi-Final Round Abrams won from Ruttan. Hawley won from Downing. Fina-l Hawley won from Abrams. DUNBAaR SHIELD TROPHY Third Round Sutclifl'e won from Ruttan. Abrams won from Miller. Ramsay won from Harwley. Hudson won from Kirkwoad. 1'80"! a 2] Semi-Final Round Szephenson won from Miller. ‘ Isherwood won from Neelands. Final Isherwood won from Stephenson SCOTCH ANTHRACITE Third Round LEE TROPIIY Fourth Round Davis. Kirkland Lake. wan from Elud- tn. Timmins. Leach. Siscoe. won from Craven. New skeard Dag H LL! Ishevwcad, Hailey‘aury. v rown. New Liskeard. Sum-Fina! Round Davis won {-er Leach. Isherwc :ci won from Smith Davis. Kirkland Lake. won nith, South Porcupine. Semi-Final Rama ‘Cham'on won from Thompson. Doggett won from Davis. Final Daggett won from Charron. Curling: Results H EW 13H] CH EWING TOBACCO CLARK-FRANCIS TROPHY Third Round 5311333 Kirkland Lake. wan fro Nw Liskeard. Ki: kland Lake a Lake, won from J pine pine. won from won won from W011 cm Char- from from from from from from from "om Doggeatt of Kirkland Lake won from Charmn of Kirkland Lake in the ON.- P.-C. finals, the score being 15-6. Davis Kirkland Lake, third; Thompson, Kirk- land Lake, fourth. Stephenson of New Liskeard captured the Purity Flour event from Isherwood, 12-10. Lorne Miller, Noranda, third; Davis “of Kirkland Lake defeated Ishervwcod of Haileybury, 10-6, to win the Lee traphy. J. H. Leach. Siscoe, third place. and Dr. R. P. Smith, Timâ€" mins, fourth. contested all the way. with Doggett making certain of victory with his last rock. A summary of the other competitions finals .follows:â€"â€" a Both consolation events, the Scot-eh Anthracite and the :Dun'bar Shield, were finished up Saturday. with only Kirk- land Lake rinks left in their respective finals, and with Jerry Abrams appear- ing in both events. He dropped the Purity Flour to Howard Hawley’s four. 14-12, but overcame Tom Ramsay‘s rink easily in the afternoon session to take home the Dunbar trophy, 13-6 in nine ends. The afternoon .Consols game be- tween Dogg‘ett and 'Charron was keenly Davis ............ 21011003003â€"11 Doggett had qualified for the Britishl Corsols by winning the Canada North- I ern Power Corporation event, and Davis through his first place in the George W. I Lee competition. En route to the finals, 1 Davis disposed of Joseph Isherwsod on I Saturday afternoon. The same rinks] had met in the Lee finals. Doggett turned back the challenge of his club- mate, Dr. M. H. Charron, in the after- noon, 10-8, and these rinks had con- tested the C.N.P.C. finals. On Saturday morning. Ishenwood had beat-en Bur-i rows of North Bay, the Hill-Clark- Francis winner, 11-10, and Charron had . disposed of Stephenson of New Lis- ' keard. Purity Flour winner, 12-9. ’ Kirkland Quartet Captures Consols Event by Three Shot Vlargin at T. 6: N. 0. Bonspiel Went Into Eleventh One Shot Down. and Takes Grand Aggregate from (‘hibmate George Dog‘gt‘tt. Kirkland Curlers Capture Exactly One Half of the Twenty-Four Sets of Prizes. Score by ends Doggett O 0 Davis ............ 2 1 Haileybury, Feb. 12.â€"Ai‘ter going into the eleventh end one shot down. Jim [Davis‘s Kirkland Lake rink came through with a three-shot margin a: that stage to capture the British Con- sols trOphy from their clubmates head- ed by George Dog-gett and bring to a conclusion the T. 6: N. O. Bonepiel held in the rinks at Hailey‘oury and New Liskeard for a week and ending hene Saturday evening. The score was 11-9 in the eleven ends and by their victory Davis and his men qualified to play in North Bay on Monday with the winners of the N,O.-C.A. ‘spiel at Sud- bury. The victory also brought revenge to Davis for being knocked out of the Power Corporation semi-final by Dog- gett. The details:â€" Kirkland Lake: J. MacDonald. H. D. McNa‘bb. ‘A. E. Sackrider. J. R. Davis â€"11. Kirkland Lake: V. E. Ridden, George Sutherland, Ken Weldon. G. F. Dog- gettâ€"-â€"9 Admission-«60¢: 115 pounds. T.P.A.A.A. 111; pounds. Timminb' BILL TURNER vs. BUDDY MANGOT’ICH JOE SINEGA FIVE ROUND BOUTS MAURICE DUSCIAUME vs JIMMIE ()GILVIE 135 pcumL. Schumacher FRANK JONES MARCEL THERIAULT vs. STEVE BELINKI TON Y DUSCIOME REGENT PERRON vs. KARLO MANGOTICH 135 pounds, T.P.A.A.A THREE ROUND BOUTS JIMMY KNOTT vs. RINO BRAGANOLO ALCIDE THERIAULT vs. PAUL MANGOTICH 135 pounds. T.P.A.A.A. 55 pounds. T.P.A.A.A 85 pound:, 'I‘.P.A.A.A 75 pumds, T.P.A.A.A ' BOXING McIntyre Gym 105 pounds, T.P.A.A.A 135 pounds. T.P.A.A.A IN THE COMMUNITY BUYLDING TONIGHT 8 p.m. ink (:9 margin ritish C VS. VS. got a first and two thirds and Hailey- bury two seconds (both to the 15119:- wood rink) and a fourth. these clubs tieing with three awards each. Timâ€" mins had two appearances in the list, both fourths; North Bay had a first and fourth. Single awards were taken by Noranda and Siscoc rinks. a third in each instance. Neelands, Kirkland Lake, {on Burrow/‘5 of North Bay def Chesney of Kirkland Lake. 'take home the Hill-“Clark-Fr prize: 3rd. Ridden. Kirkland ID. A. Smith. North Bay. In the Scotch Anthracite. Downing, New Liskeard. was third. with Ruttan of Hail aHybun fourth; in theBunbar third place went to Sutclifle. New Liskeard and fourth to Dr. 1.3:; :,.u‘ .:n of Tim- mins. Of the twenty- roux se is of pxizes put 1;) in the six events other than the championship ga curlers captured + number. In their were four firsts, I each thirds and fl got, a first and tw VVEDNESDA Y, FEB. 14 Mcrning 53.30â€"11.00 Skating Afternoon 2.00â€"3.45 Skating Evening 8.15â€"10.15 Skating GYM.â€"â€"8.COâ€"IC.00 pan. Gymnasium (flassâ€"Jiw'ry Man invited. THURSDAY, FEB. 15 Morning 9.30â€"ll.00 Skating Eveningâ€"HOCKEY 7.30 p.m.â€"â€"JITNI()R B. 'l‘imming vs. Svhumachor 9.30 p.m.â€"â€"INTERMEDIA'I‘E T'unmins vs. Schumaoher Adultsâ€"351: Children 200 GYM.-â€"â€"~BASKETBALL Evening 7.00â€"8.00 LADIE.“ GAME 8.00â€"9.00 PAYMASTER vs. MCINTYRE Admission Free 85 pounds, St. Alphonsus TUESDAY, FEB. 13 Morning 9.30â€"ll.00 Skating Eveningâ€"8.15--10.Iiiâ€"Skating GYMrâ€"Evcning Basketball Practice 130 pounds, St. Alphonsus Morning 9.30â€"-â€"ll.00 Skating Afternoon 2.00â€"3.45 Skating Eveningâ€"8.15-â€"10.15 Skating MONDAY. FEB. 12 162 pounds, St. Alphonsus GYM.-â€"8.00 p.m.â€"-B()XING M (See Ad. Below) LEG DESROCHES 55 pounds. St. Alphonsus 135 pounds, St. Alphonsus 135 pounds. St. Alphonsus Children-"256 75 pounds, St. Alphonsus MclNTYRE COMM UNITY PROGRAMME I“ 135 pounds, T.l’.A.A 08C A R F RA N K ANDY NOPIER BUILDING rsts, four 5 and fourth E1111 PAGE SEVEN .ts other man the as, Kirkland Lake actly one half the core of one dozen :mds and two New Liskeard s and Hailey- Lo the 13119.:- 1. these clubs 3 each. Timâ€" and: Lake dM

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy