Timmins "B" Sports Club Organizes Group of Young Fellows Who Plan to "Be Sports" â€"Real Sports. Timmins "B" Sports Club What it is:â€"It is a club, made up Of a groun of boys from twelve to seventesn years of age, to carry on wports and also for promoting good citizenship and clean speech. To this extent our slozan is modelled: €lean speech, clean living, clean athleties, The following in reference to the recently organized "B" Sports Ciub i given as presented hy the club‘s sports editor : â€" Origin:â€"The beginning of Club was largely due to ano‘he club called the "Balsamite Cl Anglin, a public school teache about it, and, knowing most members of this club, he spoke about a larger clvub. One day, 1641, a group of the older hboj RBalsamite Club met with M and decided upon a bigger ar club. Mr. Anglin received permission t use Birch Street School as a meetin place, and also as a place for carryin on indoor sports. Our vroblem was to p for our new club. This was task. â€"Many nam»s were THUREDAY, JULY 3RD, 1941 EVERYTHING IN FORESI P C L AOC L LCC P PP l «P P P PP PPA L P â€"AL L PP ENJOY DANCING to the Finest Music and on the Best Floor in the North Rudolph McChesney Lumber CO. ETD. Phone and also for promotin iip and clean speech. â€" jur slozan is modelled: clean living. clean athls || || Lumber â€" Mine Timber Cedar Poles blem was to pick a name 584 â€" Box 150 _ (Saveâ€"Buy Direct from Manufacturer) Our Motto: PROMPT AND COURTEOUS SERVICE ALW AYS a difficult suzgest2>d, id b heard f the > them irly in of the Anglin ma l PRODUCTS ROUGH AND DRESSED LUMBER MINING TIMBERS POLES PILING AND TIES Manufacturers and Dealers in All Kinds of Lifeboat Heroes of Britain Save a Life Every Fow Hours but none secemed tofit us. At last Mr. Anglin suggested "B" Club as a suitatbie name because it could stand for Balâ€" samites, Birch, Boys, Bees, eilc. This was decided as a temporary name, at To g=t into the club the boy who wished to join, had to pay a fee. This small fee would make him a club member until September when another fee would be paid. When the club got settled, Mr. Anglin suggested the idea of having a juvenile baseball team to enter the TP.AAA. Juvenile Baseball League. The bovs voted on this and thevy not only devided to one Brave Men Who Form Briâ€" tain‘s Lifeguards. 10 (Ry Noel Barber, Editor of the Overâ€" seas Daily Mail) : Every four hours in Britain, all through the day and night, a life is saved by imen with rough faces, old blue jerseys and a lot of guts. Th# are the men of the Lifeboat Service. Round the salt water girdle of Briâ€" tain they wait, ready to rescue the merchant seamen of this country or Round the salt water girdle of Briâ€" tain they wait, ready to rescue the merchant seamen of this country or her Allies when danger strikes from th> grey hull of a Uâ€"boat or the black hadow of a Nazi warplane, On the 1€ ON YoOoUR REQIREMENTS LET US QUOTE NO ORDER TOO SMA LL NONE TOO LARGE team has pi utter dismay HENRY KELNECK and his ORCHESTRA ha > of three to eight, Our laved the Nativily team, re of four to five. Biglik, Sports Editor of ) teams. So fatr, one game and to los: both games. ed St. Pats and ‘e to eight. Our ie Nativi‘ly team, average, they are now saving six lives a day. In the first eighteen moniths of the war the men of the Lifeboat Serviceâ€" the volunteers of the Tifeboat Service â€"saved 3,500 lives; more in that vital, vivid yvear and a half than in the lasi ten years of peace. Oon one single, bleak, stormâ€"tossed day, just before last Christmas, they saved 71 lives in M hours. From the beaches of the grey East Coast, from the sheltered coves that face the Atâ€" lantic breakers on the west, the lifeâ€" boats of Britain slid down the runâ€" wavys. On that day albne they made The T. P. A. A. boxing programine scheduled for Friday evening of last week at the Hollinger Park had to be postponed on account of the poor weaâ€" ther. The event is to be presented toâ€" morrow night, Friday, July 4th, at 8.00 pm. at the Hollinger Jark, provided, of course, that the weather again does not disappoint Boxing Programme to be Given Toâ€"morrow Night based on a minimum WNRICN is always increased. The men of the Lifeboat Service have not gone unseathsd. Lives have been lost, for the Nazis make no distingâ€" tion between any of the men who serve the sea. They, too, face constant danâ€" gers of attack by mine, by torpedo, by machine gun. At night the lifeboatmen must leave their shores without a light to guide them past their coasts. They must launch the boat in the dark. There are no floodlights to help them, and once at sea, they are almost always under fire, as circling warplanes or Uâ€"boats try to finish off their work. Timmins THE INFE ADVANCE, TIMMINS, ONTARIO Hollinger Makes Winning Run in Eleventh Inning of Ball Game Last Night Even Strugcgle BRetween Hollinger and MceIntyre for Sev- eral Innings After Macs Get Lead of Three to Nothing. Special Snap in the Last T‘wo Overtime Innings. runs by th The Holl in the sixt only wild _ The Hollinger crew came through with a 4â€"3 win last night in the Holâ€" linger Park. But they only suceesded to beat the Macs in the sleventh inning when Cherevaily knocked a single to the right field and gained s2cond by Copkson‘s sacrifice hit.. He came to third onl ar enror by Mcâ€" Intyre shortstop. Then Lawton sing!lâ€" in the sixth when Edwards threw the only wild pitch in the game. The seventh inning brought ¢two more runs in for Hollinger with Cookâ€" son and Romualdi scoring. From the seventh until the end of the game it was hard work for both teams, as each *Uosyx00;) ‘uoutsg #q siolte uo pUB pity} 0j 108 uay} pu2 ‘pjfaUy jyeil eUj 0 t uo jsJy 0J j08 sH ‘Ssoen Jojp uni t Sunja8 u; papasoons UCsIIM ‘1gaAgemou ‘sutuur pucdas ay) uU ‘j8Gq 0} uoatU InoJp AtUQ PBU J3adUuII â€"IOH ol} puUsB jUSTBI]}S Jd8IU} UMOGP juaAMA eaAqUIIWNW â€" dUL pasodstp 4pyomb stm opIs yoso Sutuut js1Â¥ su} U The Macs gC fifth inning to over Hollin-ger. The Holling held the Mac from the fifth were not thre runs by the M ea past first base to b in and get the winnit Hollinger. United Statesâ€"born member of parliament Lady Astor dances nish Floral dance at Plymouth, England, with a naval man the mayor of the town. TLA HSINYÂ¥OD MHJL SYMDNVGU YOLSV AUVT t was a proud d adian Pacific R 6hops at Montreal man, viceâ€"presidet a gathering o cials, company and newspapel great . pleasure first Canadian Canadian Army. "The machine," he said, "is the child of sweat and tears. It will be followed by hunâ€" dreds and thousands of others to help the Empire to its viectory." The tank was gratefully acceptâ€" ollinger pitcher, C Macs to weak sin fifth until the eleve threatened with 5 Ma 1V OoKson. two more runs in the ve them a 3 to 0 lead howeyv ng eactli Side was The McIntyra raight and the Holâ€" ur men to bat. In . however,. Wilson % o. bI ever, scoreda a run dwards threw the >~â€"game. g brough nger with ring. Fro came through t in the Holâ€" nly leventh innin dian Pacific Builds 1 Cherevaty ingles, and venth they on D. C. Coleâ€" nnounced to rnment offiâ€" that enth they any more , â€" workers at he nad sering the nk to the h vaty the > 2. 0. esn in 40 3 7 32 14 Score by innings: Hollinger ... 00 001 200 Olâ€"4 13 6 Mcintyre ........... 010 020 060 00â€"3 7 7 Batteries: Cherevaty, McKay; Edâ€" wards, Schledewitz. Errors: OQuimet 3, Richardson 1, Zachary 1, Thayer 1, Schledewitz 1, Cookson 1, Romualdi 1, Chase 1, Lawtan Lawton, K Oltsan, 2b Barton, rf Dorey., Hf . IL McKay, ( Chersvaty Totals MelIntyre Quimet, 3b Richardason, Dunn, cf Wilson, rf 2achary, 1b Thayer, If Kosick, 2 Edwards, p wer? run. the Hollinger Cookson, cef Romualdi, ss Chase, 3 ed by the Hon. C. D. Howe, Minâ€" ister . of Munitions and Supply, who praised Mr.‘ Coleman, H. B. Bowen, chief of motive power and rolling stock, and other Canadian Pacific men for the effort they had put into building this splenâ€" did war machine.. He, in . turn, gave the tank and all others to come off the Angus assembly line to.i'he fion. J. L. Ralston, Minâ€" ister‘ ofâ€" National Defence, who thanked the Canadian Pacific workers for the fine job they had accomplished. "You men have put hledewl!z trving to bring in the winning The Hollinger came through in last of the eleventh to win the The Rox Score \irst Canadian Tank A7 4 13 38 17 R HPO A your wholo heart into this job," he sail. He also mentioned that 300 of the thousands of tanks beâ€" ing made at the Angus Shops were being produced for the Britâ€" ish Purchasing Commission. The pictures awbove show Mr. Coleman officially delivering the first tank to the Department of Munitions and Supply and, inset, Corp. Colin Stirton, of the Royal Tank Regiment, a veteran o Dunkirk, complimenting an Ane gus worker on the construction of the tank. Canada‘s Great Past Proclaims Her Still Greater Future 1, Barton 1, Cherevaty 1. Twoâ€"base hits: Chase. Riuns batted in: Ouimet, Lawton (2) Oltean. struck out: by Edwards 9; by Chere: Notable Progress of Dominâ€" ion in Seventyâ€"four Years, to Lawton. Hit by pitcher: 0 stolen bases: Edwards. First base on errors: Ouimet, Lawâ€" ton, Oltean. Umpires: Hackett, plate; Karakan bases. "On the threshold of the seventyâ€" fifth yvear of Confederation the Canaâ€" dian people may be so busy preparing for the perilous period ahead that they have little time to contemplate their nation‘s history but if they seek faith and courage for the future they will find them in the hard won battles and the cbstacles surmounted in the days of yore. ' "It is a sobering thought that in the life span of men yet living the whole ereat story of this Dominion has been written. Since 1867 this country has tripled its population, its people have opened half a continent, subdued a reâ€" bellion, surmounted two long and terâ€" rible economic depressions, participated in three wars and in the days of peace achieved the proud position of fifth trading nation in the world. Conâ€" federation was a great vision and the Fathers builded better than they knew. "In the life and times‘ of nations, seventyâ€"five years is a comparatively brief period, and although there now is a continuous community. from sea to sea we dan safely assume that we have only scratched the surface of our naâ€" The following editorial article from Monday‘s Toronto Telegram deserves wide reading and publiclty:â€" tural wealth and that policies ‘of government : a CALL IN AND SEE THE MANY â€" ATTRACTIVE MODELS ON DISPLAY IN OUR SHOWROOMS PLUMBING, HEATING AND sHEET METAL WORK 71 Third Avenue Timmins P Add Beauty and Convenience To Your Kitchen With a | _ â€"CABINET ; SINK given wise tremendous development liss ahsad of this country when peace returns. If we seek a parâ€" allel it may be found in the history of the Republic to the south which did not begin to hit its stride until threeâ€"quarters of a century from the Declaration of Independence had passed. "The last war made the Dominion conscious of its own strength and once again there is an opportunity to make the name of Canada notable in the world. That our soldiers, seamen and airmen will do their part no one doubts. Those who stay at home, and their public leaders, have an important part to play, too, and the future happiness and prosperity of this country will deâ€" pend largely on how they play it. The passage eof seventyâ€"five yvears should be sufficient for the elimination of the hyphen from Canadianism. If, in the next quarter of a century our politiâ€" cians cease their appeals to race the*> will be but one pecple in this country â€"Cangidians. Highâ€"Grade Samples from Week‘s Run of the Press "Milton, in the immortal Areopagâ€" itica, prophesied the greatnsss of Briâ€" tain in these words: . AMOLIOUWO]} aAIdS â€"Ga am drysuuuwusgqv}s jo j98 SULuUMOId asoum Uuaut asoy} jo eStanod pUus UoIS â€"tA oy3 aairty jgntu JA 31 UB3]E o esdoy mo stt STUL,, ~wrgq Aupâ€"pru [n} 8y3 saka potzzypun 1oy pus y;no4 Ajy@tuw 1234 o[2ta UV Jo d9S 1 day BUI put doots ustu 5 oAII HWesisYy Sutsno« UCIJBU juussmd pus s{qou x purtu Aut uj cas [ SyUuIyjaxn, ,, Kingston Whigâ€"Standard: We have reason to believe that there are Gerâ€" man agents in ‘Canada, and we need not expect to see them with thick spectacles, Bavarian hats and other German insignia; they are certainly not suspiciousâ€"looking and they may not even be strangers. It is never safe to say anything about military matâ€" ters in a public place, and even one‘s friends, though not spies, may be inâ€" discreet talkersâ€" sault Ste. Marie Star: The porcuâ€" sault Ste. Marie Star: The porcuâ€" pine has, too, a very human quality, One Summer camper tells of encounâ€" tering on the trail one of these ani~ mals which had evidently been a tarâ€" get for a regular blitzkrieg from mosâ€" quitoes and blackâ€"flies and which obâ€" viously quite accustomed to the human species, held out a badly bitten paw with a plaintive appeal for sympathy. The porcupine‘s justly famous quills do not invite petting, but responding to a sympathetic tone of voice the anâ€" imal hung around in friendly fashion until it decided that there were no tidâ€" bits available to be handed out. So it much of the general efficiency of the home depends on the smooth operation of the kitchen A well equipped kitchen saves time, steps and work.. Nowhere is there a greater need for step saving than in the kitchen.., Now you can have mnuecessary pans, cutlery, linen stored right at hand in one of these attractive cabinet sinks. There‘s a model at Smith Elston‘s to sulit your needs. Come in and see them, You‘ll thrill at their beauty and Skating Roller urprised Fri. and Sat. 8.00 to 10.00 p.m. ADMISSTIONâ€"30¢ Friday Afternoon ADMISSTIONâ€"2Ec¢ SCHEDULE 2 to 4 p.m, 1 stored right at of these attractive There‘s a model Uston‘s to sult your ‘ in and see them, it their beauty and at their low cost. PAGE sSEV EN Phone 327