Timmins Newspaper Index

Porcupine Advance, 3 Feb 1941, 1, p. 7

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Hollinger Celebrate Return Of "Bummer‘" Doran To Take Leagueâ€"Leading Macs by 5â€"2 Rein{forct*] "Bumm >‘ Hcllinger C» clan by Hollimgz standin Club ence pro 1 tA brought fans, W gder his Greeoenshi were pxessm‘k 1 B. Wilson bt Macs with onl throuzh with Wilson laid a that the latte On the I finitely des shooting by what appca the first 1 cpen ncet o and in the top of the 1 with Bentk flopped in front of hin With Bswiman 0 penalty box in the Hcrbol grabbed a . blue line on a F and ~ARippeds 4t in the Greenshirts MONDAY. FEBRUARY start of ing a 1 fsrman: Bbe dest tively mild the eighte! that the H march. "V a sp@cltacuia near the en« rainso n passed ped the latter t than a scored mond t fosting KESIT DRMNMZ for trippin when Wils W ~McIinty last peri Murphy blose pla penalty C PDnLI2Y before | dangerot but th« strength 0000““000000000000000“0 Cameras Owing to a entry all other activities Films left at our studie before 9.30 are ready the same. evening at 6 Ai. It pays to got the beiter kind of work. ._A.. TCO Balsam St. N. I uspended â€" until McINTYRE ARENA pzey O 111 ROYAL STUDIO m ild Friday nimn 10Oil11 Wink t}‘e AI few anxloi 176 t got back there was seramble in front of the n two teams were at 1 the scoring Sstart was aiso Ll t scored the first nan of the McInty in the second peri Faus of 1J SCHEDULI 1) Â¥t pass mad NOTE Wi} McIr a whaen hird H J OLl 11 ind 11 record curling man D rythin jJl1a rined a of the net on a r drew his second and Mcintyre gave aus moments. Just and in Da( ol from 11n no AIm fig T1 Holli ~neC blue 91 firs! power play age . to . put Mcintyrs Imonte and caught the k. Roaring M 111 A€ 1111 a P€ oal Delim( takes MCeI H yre in the igd, Miko nside the on C Hollin time. i¢ jal penalty in tC minut: n difI ed Drumâ€" p.m aA 1I C111 nl 111 mM OTl N2b full In Killeen an â€" wWINgs, Aly 11 malk Ol MceIntvyre still kept Hollinger squad wer thrust. Finally Lone from a hard and than thi: Pelruc?l Reféore Frawley 3. Hollin 4. Holling Horbt Penalti Sometrs. shown below are the draws for the T. N. O. ‘Bonspiecl Commencing at 2.03 445 and 730 pm. All skips are requested to be ready to start promptâ€" ly at the time shown. Results of the first two draws are shown on Page 1. 2.00 p.m. Draw nIx nC wWAaSs ~dCil of sriccess. Oune day he was eration for append the operating thea students. An actor desided to give up his carâ€" ger, and becoms a doctor and in a short while he was achieving a great Geal WInner O0OLl UCMUCUIULLLL YJ ~AAUVYE NC J 7 Winner of (Drew vs Abram Winner of <Doyile vs Leach) Winner of (Linklater vs Brow Winner of <Reid vs Woolings) Winner of (Eyre vs Gomo Winner of (Lang vs Frasor) Winn*or of <(Rinn vs Eplett) vs woer of (Stephenson vs Freeman) 63 6] Holiin Hollinget Mcintyr H Hollin McTnt Dr. 0. Stahl vs T. Tooke T. Tod vs J. D. MacDonald A. E. Lake vs Dr. Somervilk w. ODonnell vs L. White E. Olive vs. G. Doggett. J. P. Dick vs R. S. Taylor ".30 Draw 1J V winngr of (Pickering vs MacMillan Winner of (Kilborn vs Stephenson of <McDowell and Volume of (Jamieson vs Linghorne Winner of (MacVittie vs Sauder) Winner ‘of (Moscoe vs Harvey) V inmer of (McMahon vs Husband) Winner of (Sharp vs Murdoch) v inner of (MeGuire vs Howey) nd from â€"rapsed k Joos Delmonte wo>nt through to > MHollingor‘s fourth goal of the it unassisted. Tt was a pretiy pece stick handling that sent Delmonte ) pcsition and he blaz>1 a waistâ€" 1 that Beare had litt!l» chancs T winnsgr of Vinner of Winner of naltic Bak J. MacVittie vs L. Sauder C. Arnott vs F. R. Gibson scarth vs R. Harris. . D MacKeracher vs J. Is L. Hudscn vs H. L. Grar R. Bettiol vs H. B. Hawle} 3. Amm vs D. Hannason F. Greenacre vs T. L. D Cain vs W. R. Thomp A. Solomon vs Dr. R. McCoy vs T. Rowe WwIin PuUgs:.ey V M. Ranki s. Grant. ssfully tyre â€" Goal, Beare; «lefonce, and Bowman; centre Lister; Coop>r and Drummond; alterâ€" Tolouka, Hurphy, Somers, Baker, i. Lone. Lorraine, Colquhoun. ‘ee â€" Jse Raybould and Frank DrOK2 i old acto ran {itch Doran Draws For ‘. N. 0. ‘Sprel sUMMARY ; First Period _wW. Wilson (Stewart) 18.09 ‘re, Cooper (Drummond) 19.37 ; esâ€"RxtT. ; Secand Period | ror Horbel (unassisted) â€" 7.10 | D Imonte (B. Wilson) 18.12 | ?.\â€"â€"Domn, Bowman. i Third Period f er. Dolmconte (unossisted) 8.25 | M f «Doyie vs Leach) r of (Linklater vs Brow of <Reid vs Woolings) c of (Eyre ys GomC â€"still kept pressing but the squad were cqual to every nally Lone picks1 up a reâ€" m a hard shot by Kilieen 1 the> rubber home with lass : minutes to go. A minute Stewart combined with B. d Horsel to secore the last night. Just befor» the gams ners and Doran started to s up but the pair were ind chastd to the box befcre attle could get started. nl Bentlsy; â€" defence, t Delmont>; centre, W. Wilâ€" â€" Gordon . and Palmate>r; Horbol, B. Wilson, Haflidâ€" Kerr. Villeâ€"neuve, Dawson, Lorne (Killsen) Stewart (B. Wilson ation was performed so| . that at the end, the stu-!c(; into loud applause. | tor spirit réturned, and the [=â€"" r bowing his appreciation‘m k and removed the pat.-i as an encore. | G; ppendicitis, and Encore Richmo Pickerin Kilborn F. H. Hyckie O. M. HendersO Vs J. R. Davis pnm. Draw s wW. Hyndadman ~1831 | Killeen, Doran, 18 CEDAR sSTEEET N Expert Work â€" @ _ Reasonable Prices â€"= â€" Phone 590 â€"â€" Viking Electric Abrams) v Downin J. Ncecla 1) 8.25 idard) 1 ) Winâ€" 00d Ninetyâ€"One Rinks Compete In Recordâ€"Setting ‘Spiel Starting With Lee Trophy T. N. 0. Takes Serond Place m Bowling League Some Poor Bowling by Th: Advance. Complete List of Competitors Shown Below, Along With Club Affiliation.â€" Possibility That Number of Entries May be Limited in Future if They Continue to Increase. The prin.ors rolled ow their worsi game in many s2asons. The T. N. O on th: clher hand are up thoir fine boewling. After the first gams, Gambles went all out, rolling over twolve hundred in the sesond and over the thoausand mark in the third, to take ;wo points. The standiing: Gambles 8; T. N. O.. 7; Power, 6; and Advance, 3 points. ADVANCE ‘~.; 161 207 :125 403 effect. Officials < are highly elated this vear‘s bhig eV 12a9§ | qtumt t UouAMm 4J8J qOU sI olf} q | m018 cr sonumuoo fords, om poptaoid d °P 4«itttay0 porRs SEA 9I TordsttoG ‘po |sureok sY oJ UgULITRYQ ouf} 30 auo I '(1”[1(:1110[03 L2xI, O ‘pibJod ‘M snomoeicd oup seXA Ssyunt sutttmg aIAjUIPW sYQ} 182 us | Sutaq ‘tordsuog ‘O ‘N » L [enuuy ‘C â€" Sumearqâ€"p1i0oat ap 1}8 H P xyoom styy qred Sutye3 feuuosiad yuLI ICT .' ay} Jo o;0fdwoc e st mofsq Umolg timus vears being spa liant sucC rinks, the beings the A:CRBR: "Bettoil, J. Quw Quinn. C. Corrigan. 4. < W.â€" "Pod,; Dr.. 14. 4°. es Roberts, E. Salomaau. Dr. H. Hudson, R. Plemin ton, G. Chenier. W. O‘Donnell, J. Bennelt, . C. Pavics. K. Kilborn, H.:Leng, H. V Pooley. F. Dwyer. Dr;.G.:J. 4 H. Chateauy A >R »Bat 3. P. Dick, A. F. Mitchell. W. Jamieson W. GGood. nhal Chalmers, J. SubD! 1. Jennyv. E. L. Réid, J. N. Sisson, Albert Cain H. Wheaton. W. R. Rinn H. Shantz. D. Cloutier Passmore, E. 8. Mâ€"Coy, D. James. . K; WA Countryman. J. Beatty K. Evré Gard 31 Newkirk. T. J. Doyic, P. J. Dunl Desaulnier. HI. Moscoe, 8. Platus, C 4. R. Hall, F. W. Simp:s Purlong. I). MeGuire, N. O‘Doni» Miller. H therland, M in aford, H. 2. OQve, . W. Wil to eni{t‘l rge Drew, A N. Leaman. L. Hudson, rland, D. A. a@ar‘s big ecveni and n pared to make the afl success. The followin the first mentioned in thre skip:â€"â€", Scarth, Watson E. Lake C. Evans, P. E. . G, Brown. Saudeor, W. S, Adan ner, W. G. Smith. Amm Black, I McDow>ll, W. Burns, R. Smith B. Lon{ 1, 4. Hoppetr. south Porcupine <e@rit 11 MoeIntyrc _ Saxton H. Hert Timmins McMillan W. Simpson neén for tlhis stated officially that ecl continues to grow distant when a limit have to be put into of the Mclntyre clu‘s the response for . â€" L. / E. Elliot. arson, H Stenhouse. Pare, W. McDermo Hansen J. D. Sutherland Sutherland. Carson D Prior, K ind no effort is he affair a bril. lowinz are the 1060@ in cach cas? Bui Cho+niet ©Coop al H rancis TIM MIN»® p, w. Doyl D. Fitzjolhn Waddell M. E. Wel Sutto Abrams O O. Atkin 1bic} J â€" McNeil MecD Cybulski Ma( Ranki Demeza B Wood vwitl AlieV t Dayvis, A. * Ned | McNabb, W. H. Ga C(+. Doggett, T. R Dalâ€" | eriand. H. McPhail (QUuU THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Arm®.:rC Movrs®* Gardne ) 1e i| J. Moss P. Nict‘s>i McoQuarii MeHu h TCWCTs P !P. McLeood ~ ~H.â€"M. C [Kee, D. M mall 11. 5. Taylor 1. H. Millar. J. W. Brow! J. Penman. 8. T., 1 Sceviour, V. C I.. White. J 8. G. Eplict Anderson. A . Bink] W . phy H. ‘B. Hawl Rood. H. Doz Houston Robb Arimstror Ai 1>}, M Bleasdse T); J. C. FUuck, yV G. wW. Sayies. T. Rowe, BR Patterson t. Merner. W. R. Thompson, E. W. S. Donnelly, W. J. D. MacDonald, P. Brooker. H. Valentine. "T‘~ ‘Tobke, CG. Doner, W. Armi Peri Churc : 4 R Churd( E. V. Woolin wW. Church. Clell Howard AWI ham. McC H. Hepburn, G, Hamilton. O. M. Henderson, M. N. Shaw thill, 8. Puzey. W al I». Pilon, I. A.â€"A _ _G. Morrison. W. Hyndman, D: Cook. 11 Cochrane rov. D. A. MacKeracher, W. L. WO l N. MclLeod., N. McPhee. _ _J. MacVittie, A. Hurd, M. Davi B 0 Yi Hart John. NnIlall Abram H Un Howf Linklater h [. Gomoll, J. E. B . McDonald. . Harvey, V. R. , "H. Brohman. Hannason. I. J T. Steep. Englchart raser, H; Way, l1( Creenacre Lazier. Stevenson Riddell A. Ha Hyckic W. BH. Sharp Linghorne. D. McKelvi r. _ J. Sholdic2. Harleybury mall St>phonson Mu1i t . Koirklarnrd Lake New Liskeard . J. L. Pulton J: Clark, 5. Ross, J. Bow Ngeiandas . A. 1e11, Hormel inkin, I Down2y Millan mervill W. Brof Kapuskasing 185 162 AIQ Narth Bay 142 "()3 OrY, :X »dhnam irk. A. O‘Donnoll 31 Pa 1 our nmet PTor Amim,. A. Wilder ruley amsay. G. A. S 11 Ruichara W. Wright 214 230 167 npht Bedard, Dt MacDonald W. Rushwort] Poppli Waltt Wearlt Marston. M H. 5 M. PFri Andrew W. Inch, H Pinkleyv Richardson l CO( 203 192 £. 30 141 220 159 y % 170 133 242 Burnf RankiIn 121 10 Sherwooad Smith K. Ne Sseanmn( impson Val 1DMin C(AnND Griet SA l1 PTlmb 6836 44 AC | _ "The quthre | adian mining hishest level | position at | | ribution of istruggle for â€" L tie way of lif Mining Taking Big Part in Dominion‘s Effort for the War wi ]* $rom the iron, ct3p®r, mcks and aliuminum Ores are mould sinews of war, and from the go of Rouynâ€"Noranda Kirkland Timmins and other camps come as much treasure for the war C is rais>d by taxationâ€"but wil $200600803 or which the hardrock imnen broug last year go to the Unitead St bolster Canada‘s foreizn exchans tij0n. crews in western C i0Ol been Kin: yTea 110 )t BC N dian producers of leacd, coppC zinc entered into contracis wi United Kingdom for delivery M 1.000.000,000 pounds annually, at which averageod. albout one.â€"thn ‘han the Canadian equivalent © rent dommestic charges for the metals in the United ‘Statts. represented an annual saving | tain of $35,000,000. $ Sclling Mctals Below First J rom wW. McMahon Brady, H. Laidl he currecnt conuucL Placocs Miner at Fromni in War W‘ on wital fAops the Government C Ri 1( 1} old prodi Ord CLHC ny business 0 erforms a mo hne hardâ€"rotk | adgder a‘s mint ir climt S O Prices LC Cl In During th adl) H. Richm KtC LC JeSItH in producers 000 for a. 1939, inct 8 and $ 9 { ‘r 2old inmnpox AW OM ld proguciiouil. 1915 the mines ainczt the â€"mor‘ 1V outbreak of war found UF nining industry operating : level in its history, and n at the start to make icl iron ld Shows Increase of Many Millhons. dust mad 184 ,( t1 but order 11 Has Important Place Material for Arm 1e3 from Other Metal coppel lead i nted an annual | $35,000,000. $ ing Mctals Below Prices. rd L1C tbreak of war found the Canâ€" ning industry operating at the evel in its history, and in the at the start to make a con.â€" of utmost impoartance to the for {freedom and the democra.â€" iteman Canadial was abl( ~ed to an $500,000,000 Al 1 jacity* for 1,000,000 t ichard C. Jackson) he drills of the thern Ontario and North. bac. production Canâ€" in the szzsond year of the to an all.lime high in 1€ present in tary contribu imining men. of th which availab 191 I staft : MINTNC nard C. cutpu d 1i 40 J 1940 11L Timg Drome 21 Thw @mr€ ndus valu 1r0} 00 q lrInoIr only 90,4 he result that golt jumped producti9r 1939 t»~» more that ir found the s3p°r, mnickel, lead are moulded the rom the goldfields Kirkland Lake amps come almost the war effort os nâ€"Bbut with this G6OOCCI or belt*r men brought out Unit2sd States to 101 illâ€"time y further Whi 11 oda ) The certain CcA on e me to| th levt 111 w J31 nb lal 14 diat pal First War 11 1t io worker in field today sorvice than gold mings." reflined no the producâ€" coppect W irdt $16,000,003 200,000,.009 he mll of $474 191 Th snuffi hizsh in stepped nat #old hird ITC AY y Canaâ€" mer and C 4 i1 tha takin: r arm [3 pro C may ion in is the ( ~ThHC 5 ~Aave United quird f{ â€"BrC h the about prices pSSi Up OA War ada prC }19)) *+£34 cl2 red ame This Briâ€" 1¢ 10 T1 Luckless Porkies Drop To Last Place In Group Race After Saturday Night Draw ecid at 37 cents a pound and was finally pogged ty the United â€"States at 26 ctnts a price which was more than 250 percent.. higher than the soverrment #ots the mtal from Canâ€" ada loday,. Again in the last war, hishâ€"grade zinc brought 27 cents a pcound, and it was the work 0of on> Canadian mining company. wwhich finally It4 to Buitain being able to z3t the metal at 15 centsâ€"but even Ohis price was 400 percent greater that that at which the industry is currently Bisons Overcome Twoâ€"Goal Deficit Built Un hby Doms. Ticing Tally Comes After Wild Scramble Late in Third supplying Brham In the secand year of the First Gr 'a' War, Canada proguced no férroâ€"alloys, but todavy â€"Dominion provides all dsmesiic requirements,. and, especially since the conquest of Norway, suppli®s the bulk of Britain‘s nesods. The same more or less hold true wiih nickel, lead ard alumimum. Those are, the leadtrs in the Canaâ€" dian industry, but if Canada‘s metal pr oduction was confined only to nickel. dead, aluminum, 001,')"1 gold and zinc, wartime as well as peace tim> industry would stall and the war effort falter. some Minor Mclals of Groal V alue Among Canadian mining production needed in peace and sssentially difeâ€" andâ€"death â€"industrial requirements in war are: Manganese for shellâ€"making: «. Chrcmium for st°el alloys and siain.â€" less steel: ' : 3 Tunsten for highâ€"speed: steels; Mclybdenum for armtr plate, and syscial shock.resisting steols; Magnesite for refractories, without which production and the naâ€" tions nonâ€"f>rrous metallurgy would be crippled hopselessly; Mica for electrical insulation, and, more important, an esseontial material for aircraft sparkplugs; And tin. antimony and other less>râ€" known metals for babbits and bearinzs. The Empire pitâ€"head for the most important of the war minerals, Canada has two weaknesses in her armor Of resources, oil and iron Oore, but in both cases, the defliciency is being reâ€" th InC VA MciInty Ankerit Holling Dome 1CcA Was t â€" which ipplying n thoe s han 1838 LC Cw ua ".-- ho. .t d asdliocant d mc l’ermd Hollmger N(m in Third Place, One Point Ahead of Dome. at greater. To squzsezse ‘m the roci illsa new 2C 17 7 0 1 me 18 G 10 2 Games This Week Wednesdayâ€"Hollinger at Dom Pridayâ€"McIntyre at Ankerite. ‘od . M av nise whe â€"suffici2n ay Have Sufficeint Oil and pid development ef the y oil ficld in the past fc the recont indications of expansion of the proveé ise what is hop@d to be ; Mines League Standing 4( ut ind nokel ight," he : @ for the | dvancsd and C » but 14 jreak and 11 it ino ssible prod xescptional: employmen ith produc high grade dspo:its On riv now being developed sible production of 750,â€" xcecptional‘ly pure ore. mployment in the mines th production, but to a The average number of d in the mines since is five percent larger early 1939;, while that in branch is almost six per 300,00 higzh it A 1 19 4 th possible ou iustry Jhas prCi re prczs2rti?s ie pz:zcroleum nly produc: uffled round and at least ‘der., Then nt hopefully fow of further ULIPM1 WiLlLi gut. Threc an«l failed Fron Turn arecead now 2() torms wit} but the th position fo and TCO McIntyrs aren luck!c«s Porki | after building Rreld until th sescond framso theoly firss; goa in thi fina@liy «> that neit break in the Pork] Dome dominated th first sossion but Anke: means outclassed. Bot opportunitie as the plas wildored |Anksrite hind an {seding | first sossion but Ankeéerite were By no means outclassed. Both teams miss»d opportunitie as the play progressed and carly in th> battle "Red" Doran was through all alons only to hit the goal with a hard drive. With less than five minutes of the period rasmaining "Butts" Dunn hroke a long streak of sebreless appsarances when he sink a pase from ‘Buck" Thomas for .the first esal of the nitht. ‘uuun[|oo alocls eU} OjUI A1gAa parm aqproxUty ueptoUul StUQ]} UoIMA eU083 sem ponmed su1, n ns dwoy u3IM ‘39uUu yond otf}; powWUWsIs pBSU osat aol} 0j atWo9 NO uy put _ ‘dot J r dutsy courteq | ojur poqtun:;‘; UsIcG usd oyp 114 ay ise 3suf put jBaty} oUl jg9W 01 wÂ¥o 808 ojttgyUuVy auy,1, q Q1 ol I}IAM AIB3T» oIj$ UBICCI ‘*eid us JO 1Â¥UStoY ay} 18 pus i puodJs all]} S2 patldJc; pBI UI[S IUL | 4. Ankerite, H l Y oung) Penaltios hn secred thz> first wellâ€"timed passing Allan and Jack Yo Herbile Carnegie, puCct hoc} on t2? the dang ued up. In the anx10us of carnin: themselvC a potenti of carning the cdd poin themselves with one m a potential fourâ€"man .d Lineups Dome â€" Goal,; Brol Taylor and Dunn; c>ntr Harrig and Kossick; alt« gins, Woon, Fumm°ron Huazgins, Thomas, Turc Ankerit» â€" Goal, K Hawkey and Patton} C€ wings, Hepworth and A O. Carnezie, H. Carneg Paulson, B. Young, LeVf Refere Laplantt Puflaloâ€"Ankt ucked stormed ftihie * there is no bli: growled the rmma blinrpin‘ lies". S Dome, Do Young) Penalties â€" Dome, Penaltlk Penalt Toron ratss them from M 10e local Szniar N. O Rangers 2; Canadie Boston 4; American tripping, tWOo led out by th I could score. National Hocke League neve am 2C( ound th of the @arena Sa fore Browl attack ® U ~EMAR Y First Period Dunn, «Thomas) Ԥâ€"â€"NOn2. Period n 17 Hollin: p1 Guac aln, Una Harris, Tur( Third Perisd ~~GCGarnegie, streaked inty the one to beat but Kemp. alie cam» out of his net reat and bodied Doran the shot ling. d into th> corner off Kemp lay sprawled on o and defendcor 11 Sunday Canadien PC Saturda s 1¢ ASt 31 )Y semed to cond got of an An}k n streake Overtimst An 3( "no b M ayy th four shmno nallyvy be K.IN 11 AC PAC xÂ¥nI H 1i 1t , nat Up ged* a lot of id been coutâ€" s the Ankerâ€" Thae Bisons and in a nd contentt in man pep up the under way erites powser a intoy ths 1t 1 V ittarello, , Nevins. gdefen a t T 1i‘ ip to even ird | plagso eceâ€" minutes urred and wWIUA O Hepwo: oal on e and thne lise out of count was the inged and k defen in; win . â€"F. HAU colosut 5. PH wiIint 5 11 Ja l "mighty n short beâ€" id Bai} Hu seemed chant? only e th th hn C 4 21 Lt

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