BRING YOUR INSURANCE 4 _ UP TO DATE â€" â€" â€" call Simmsâ€"Hooker Pickering By 6â€"3 To Take Second ing second. Ernie Mailot went down : Combines came back for the remainâ€" on a ground slam buf brought in Frank ing:â€"two runs out of their three with Chase for the third run. . Neddow Donlevy andâ€" Romualdi crossing home started a tour with a walk, going toâ€"after Romualdi dpove out a beautiful second on Romualdi‘s error as Levenâ€" double. Johnny Oltean struck out doski romped across the plate with the after denting the cash book with tons fourth and final crossing for the rally. of fouls out of the park. Combines went out for retaliation in the last half of the second After going down tenâ€"pin style in the first and Beginning the hball game with a fourâ€" run rally as every playing member of the team went to the plate in the openâ€" ing frame, the Hollinger squad cleaned the Combine nine for a 6â€"3 win at the Hollinger Park last night and moved into second place in the league standing while the fans wont against the umâ€" pires loud and long from about the fifth inning out. . Opening the gatne in the first, Holâ€" linger‘s Adamchuck went to the initial sack on a walk from Combine pitcher Bussicre. â€" McKay, following went down on a bunt and Dunn made first and later stole second with Chase loadâ€" ing the sacks after him on A walk. _ Levendoski released the rally with a single and brought in Adamchuck and Dunn, topping off the chore with stealâ€" ing second. Ernie Mailot went down on a ground slam buf brought in Frank on P _ _3 _3 22e L T CA .. . dA is atelicetnainte itc * Lawton walked to first and Cherevaty went down on a ground shot to retire the side with four runs in and every man at bat. HERTY ROADHOUSE Members The Toronto Stock Exchang ATTALTT!] 10nNn Tuesday and Wednesday : Preparing Ice For Summer Skatâ€" Monday Night: Ukrainianâ€"Canadian Festival Lead From The First Canadian Legion Summer ‘Show Brewis Bravo Albany River ...... 35 B AICAIL 7 9 Alexandera ... 23 26 Am Kir ...............l.. 13 15 Annagque ... 8 10 Anoki 7 8 Be Cent Tonight, Friday and Saturday Nights 20 PINE STREET NORTH is MclInnis Block Phone 112 } Night‘s Session SCES yiving the Hollinger the same trea ollinger Hitters Taking went in the first half of the second. n‘h“ maidnan â€" amananii â€"Hhacon â€" At Agents With Underwriting Facilities ‘â€" For All Lines Of Insurance In Ball Standing APPROXIMATE PRICES UNLISTED SECURITIES Orders Executed on Commission Basis Only 110 120 13 15 14 18 Eastward Depinsa . Electrra .. Hridge .. Hoyle Gov Gid Gwilliam Flicka .. With Barilko going out at first, Kubis on third and Tennent nesting at first, Cherevaty caught Beland‘s pop fy on the mound and .Donlevy bowed on foul :o end the ball game. 4 Hollinger .. ... uy 400. 000 020....6 Combines ... 010 002 000....3 Umpires: Lloyd Chambers, plate; Steve Karahan, bases. s ns n _ last half of the ninth looked good for the Combines with Kubis making third base as first man up after runâ€" ning his single to second on. Barilko‘s hit( batting for Bussiere) and Tenâ€" nent‘s single carrying him: to third. (Tennent batting for Scarlett). _ Hollinger brought in their last two in the eighth, with Dunn and Mallot coming in with the tallies, Dunn singled and stole second with Chase and Levendoskiâ€"advancing him as they struck out and Mallot running him home with a double to come in on Neddow‘s double. immediately afterâ€" ward, leaving Neddow on second to die aAs Lawton hit out.. ‘ Umpire Chambers received the moans of the fans for allowing Tennent to hit for Scarlett with Scarlett being leading off man for the Combine nine Dunn retrieved Kennedy‘s hit in circus style, covering half the field to make the catch. . MacDonneli finally brought Romualdi home but went out in trying to make second on his hit and Kennedy hit out to close the half. With Kennedy launchet on third Bussiere went down to retire the side with one run in. Bussiere pitching for Combines alâ€" lowed ‘eight nits, four walks and fannéed seven in â€"the process with Mike Chereâ€" vaty on the Hollinger mound came out with fourteen hits two . walks and fanned three men for nine ‘innings. n iB 4 5.5 d CC Y OT C td CE ET di made second base on a single when Neddow errored with a wild pitchâ€"to first, only to be caught off base at third. Oiltean walked and Macâ€" Donnell singled and stole second, doâ€" ing the tour with Kublis‘ single after moving part way on Kennedy‘s hit. â€".‘The game went tight until a relief ln the fourth when Frank Chase went after a foul ball from Kennedy, ran into t.he fente near the Combine dugâ€" out and bowled a lady over as she Try The Advance Want Ads South Porcupine. .. 25 30 .... 8 10 . 11 18 .. 18 20 . 14 17 .. 15 18 .10 11 17 20 ~0 11 12 14 15 20 13 16 18 BRUCE AVENUE Phone 30 10 12 34 37 11 14 the mesh for a look Wic O .. 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The win place in th The Con until the O‘Donnell with walks ick a twoâ€"L sitters, Ken the two ru: The two after Levan crossed the the. seventh Levendos]) lowed by pi and tagged effort, com â€" Adamchuck _ cessful actil %# ~> Taking their single : hit of" the‘ day *"‘From the â€" Hollinger, Pitcher, â€" Lefty O‘Donnell, the Combines made the hit pay with two runs in the eighth inning to put the Hollinger nine away on a 2â€"1 victory at the Hollinger Park on Sunday afternoon before some 4000 fans. ‘ - 10 12 13 15 11 13 17 20 13 13 7 °l1 9 11 Levendoski took the fifth hit alâ€" lowed by pitcher Kosick in the seventh and tagged the ball for a two bag effort, coming home on a single by Adamchuck for Hollinger‘s ‘only sucâ€" cessful action. with walks and then gave Alex Kosâ€" ick a twoâ€"base hit to bring in the base sitters, Kennedy and Pete Babando, for the two runs of the game. The two runs came in immediately after Levandoski of the opposition had crossed the plate in the last half of the. seventh inning. The Combines were held scoreless until the eighth inning when pitcher O‘Donnell allowed two men on bases The win put Combines up in second place in the league standing. f Step Into Second Place As Result Of Sunday‘s Base- ball Victory â€". . Two Hits In Eighth Give Combines Win In the last half of the eighth, Holâ€" At any rate, the only talk :‘of future do‘s for the Joseph lie in the possibility of his fightingâ€"either Tami Mauriello or Jersey Joe Walcott. in September of this year, but of course, nothing has been made definite. Coach Hap Day states the rulings will be of benefit both to the players and spectatars. spectators, maybe, but as for the players, it looks as though they will be abiding by the manual of arms such as lining up with broken sticks and startlng lance charge in the manner of the old Light Brigade. to retire with the guilded bonnett before anyone can knock it off him. And we feel he deserrves the privilege of holding the undefeated champions honor along with Tunney, for Louis has been the most punctilious of all champions, with t.he exception of the stories regarding the dancing master Jim Corbett. to the rules are accepted. ‘The rules, or perhaps only suggestions as yet, would permit a player to continue in the game without returning his broken stick; new face off points, for offsides, behind the blue lines; making legal the hook check, formerly a penalty drawing infraction; and F6 stop in plsy should spectator arrive on the ice surface. And Might even go so far as to say that broken hockey hickorys will bring back the days of quarter staff and shelalah battles, hookâ€"checks, the early version of lacrosse, and the Irishmen‘s game of "hurling" (and what a game), so that, bending the lines of reason, it looks as though the sport :will be oneâ€"grand fiasco, with spectators running hither and thither across the hockey cushion, goal tenders with broken arms when attemptâ€" ing to hold the puck and being knocked about with ‘broken ‘sticksâ€" and blood shall flow like wine. o â€" A comparison of the American loser Conn and the English winner Woodcock â€"was offered in the: Toronto Telegram with a shot of Conn sporting the single cut under his left eye as the losing fighter and. Woodâ€" cock complete with swelled, closed and well painted black eye, split lips: and bleeding nose as the winner over Mills in England. As for the winning, _and champion, Louis, who is taking in a spot of goif now that the battle is passed, it looks "as though he may ~have Getting back to the mention of the Louisâ€"Conn affair, at the beginning of: the column,â€" we learn that while Joe and Billy battled, Senator O‘"Toole fumed and the mighty Jacobs smiled, Bruce Woodcock was .smiling through split lips at: his victory over Freddie Mills. It is out of proportion, of course, but Disney depicts the ice surface packed with ‘battling spectators while players sit back in the blue seats andâ€" watch complacently and he ends up his little reel with the comment, "hockey is the: spectators sport." Theâ€" game wil; not beâ€"drab anyway â€" if you can talk the boys mw playing under the new rules, as: bent above. The lines of reason are broken in Disney‘s cartoon and we are not too sure that if these hockey rules become law they will cause as much hubbub as the introduction of the pariâ€"mutuel did amongst the opinion that 1 Gromyko, seated in a $100 chair, compliete with back, at the Louisâ€"Conn fiasco, must have feit that Michael B. Jacobs wouid be a boon in making collections for the USAS.R.,. it comes to the iore that in New York the hockey bigs wcen.homakmgatew minor alterations to the rules set down for hockey. / In the light of this we might say that a cartoon by Walt Disney is appearing in a local theatre, composed on the present day themes of hockey without being too flattering towards the sport, but nevertheless an insight into what the fans may see in the future if the alterations last but not least is the ruling that a penalty: be. awarded the tender should he hang on to the puck in order to force faceâ€"off. Yeldaw ...._....:.:. 235 28 Yellowknife :....... 300 400 Val Dbel ........._....._.. 5 7 Vit Min :........ 65 100 Santigo Sepha .. Sheldone Ritoria Rupun Peg T N Pelango Privateer qQuest ...... Osulake Fax 18 20 ;“LI‘.@ "You can‘t pass this byâ€"law‘" Counâ€" cllor Wm. J. Doran asked the town clerk. “No,†Mr. Shaw told him. Can we charge a license fee?" Mr. Doran asked. "One dollar," stated Mr. Shaw. "On the sale of certain articles of food we can issue licenses, but we cannot stop them selling other things," Councilior Ellen Terry said. _â€""The people must want the vendors, as they make a living at it," Mr Doran stated. "It‘s not a case of wantlng themâ€"â€"I couldn‘t do without them," Miss Terry explained. "It is where they locate themselves." The. town council‘s struggle to conâ€" trol the activities of potato chip venâ€" dors, came to a inglorious halt at its Wednesday meeting, when it learned that in the opinion of the town‘s soliâ€" citors, it had no power to restrict the vendors of such wares. Come Out On Top In Tilt With Council Ramualdi caught the ball, rolled over on the turf two or three times, and came up with the ball safely retrieved. Combines: 000 000 020....2 Hollinger; 000 000 100....1 Umpires: Lloyd Chambers and Pete Dominas. Potato Chip Vendors Mike Cherevaty occupied the mound ~Seventeen other pe for the Hollinger squad in the ninth, for alterations, repir holding the Combines hitless® fof the final frame. ies > _ *Wn d .. The circus apot. ofâ€"the. day was taken by Louis Romualdi, who | won the‘ approval of the fans with a sengational catch of a fiy ball driven out by Holâ€" linger catcher Tony Delmonte. . Daylight saving jt folks tired an hour m‘ linger coach Barton sent out Lawton as a pinch hitter for O‘Donnell to reach first on the only error of the day for Combines when Johnson muffed Lawton‘s single. Vine, runâ€" ning for Lawton, was caught out. at second to end the Hollinger threat to retaliation. GRAY COACH LINES LEAVE NORTH BAY: 9.85 a.m. 4.45 p.m. 11.00 p.m. Try The Advance Want Ads. T â€" No““_\ BP‘\‘ , â€" _1TO 3 pike each way inclusive of the voicing of the SINGLE $7.00 (t«x incivees $12.60 (Daylight Time) ‘The chair was occupled by Presiâ€" aent Ellet Smith, who heard satisâ€" factory reports on the organization of the "Tag Day", headed by Kinsman Len McKerrow, and Kinette Florence McKerrow. Over fifty ‘girls, with the assistance of Kincttes, were tagging for the benefit of the Kinsmen Cancer fund. Praise was extended~ â€"by the executive for the efficient manner in which Workman, and Wilf Brochu, handled the recent Natlonal CIOtmng Collection. 4 by "Bang: Bob Buell Other: sbusiness on the agenda were reports from Past President Roy Hardy on the forthcoming, Barn Dance whlch event will be under the guidance of Claude Bowker this. year. ‘The Barn dance will be held. approxdmabely on July 26. attached to the RXC.A., and thence to "army counsellorship" on rehabilitaâ€" tion problems. Mr. Wrenshall spoke of returned soldier getting back to "civvy street", and he stressed encouragement in this direction. ‘The speaker also emphaâ€" sized the importance of helping "disâ€" abled veterans", and> "amputation cases." The speaker was introduced by "Bang‘‘ Robinson, and thanked by ~Charles Leppan gave details, on membership and named those who earned 100 per cent attendance. _A singâ€"song followed with Henry Kelneck in charge of the program. Owing to the fact that a holiday weekend occurs this weekend, there will be no regular meeting of the Klnsmen club on Monâ€" day, July 1. The estimated costs on building perâ€" mits issued from the municipal buildâ€" ing this week total $85‘75 .with the highest estimated cost being $1200 .for the erection of a new home by. Armand Dallaire of 151 Rea St. and two estiâ€" mates of costs of $1000 for the inst,alla- tion of . concrete foundations to homes of A. Pacione of 210 Birch St. South and E. Halonen of 53 Lakeshore Road. A permit for the building of a second house was issued to A. Dubien of 37 Lablanc Ave., with the . oost of the proposed building estimated at $750 Building Permits â€" Ring $8575 Total â€" Seventeen other permlt.s were issued for alterations, repairs and additions. The pros and cons concerning the Daylight saving just makes some Iks tired an hour earlier. i, who heard satisâ€" i the organization of headed by Kinsman ind Kinette Florence _ Additions to Rural Hydro Service Thesée facts are presented for your information, and with the expectation that they will eniblé you to bear more patiently with a situation beyond the control of your Commission. _ Essential materials and equipment are in extremely short supply, and the prospects of obtaining additional quantities in the immediate future are very meagre. Strikes in various basic industries and the extraordinary national demand are holding back the supply of all equipment needed. While the Commission will exert every effort to obtain material.and équipment for rural line construction, it can complete this year only a small part of the full program which it bhad planned. Consequently, many applications already approved will not, of necessity, be completed this year. Your Commission desires to bring to the attention of Ontario farmers who have applied for Hydro service, a condiâ€" tion which is now senously slowing up the building of rural extensions. . Your Commission will endeavour to serve all applicants in order of receipt of applications, giving preference to all farm and similarly essential applications over those for other types of service. + THE HYDROâ€"ELECTRIC POWER COMMISSION OF ONTARIO Mule (bflï¬llll Mr. Cloutiere is himself working on the repairs and it is expected the boat . _ l be back in operation before the The prompt actton of Joe Cloutiee Wetk is out. saved his motor launch, "The Haig," â€"In the meantime Mr Cloutier had familiar on the Mattagami River, when arranged for another boat w carry it struck a "deadhead" about 3 p.m. on Seturday afternoon near the Mcâ€" Chesney Lumber Mill. gaping hole in the back of the boat, bending a prope!ller and damagâ€" ing the stern bearing. The boat was returning from its Ev ery You n 5 o 4 HEAD OFFICE + WATERLOO, ONTARIO BRANCH OFFICEâ€"6 Cedar Street North, Timmins, Onlario Eliet A. Smith, C, L. U. â€" Branch Manager REPRESENTATIVES Arnold Beauchamp M. M. McHugh J. E. Sullivan "Bang" ‘Robinson Louis Lauzon §. E. Lefebyre, Ansonville E R. Anderson, Kapuskasing William E. Bower, Kapuskusirlg " .. . should answer these questions: ing your home greater than you expected? In most cases the answer is "yes." Probably there is‘a mortgage and other debts. Given time, yous can pay them! But they could be a burden to your wife, if something should happen to you. That is one reason why you should have adâ€" equate life insurance protection. Were the EXPENSES Does it matter which COMâ€" Life insurance companies are much alike as to policies and rates, but actual longâ€"term results vary widely. Evidence of PANY Yyou insure with? Yes! §3 the startâ€" Bandy Palls run when the mishap the mail, freight and passengers up to Wawaitin Falls with the boat leavyâ€" ing daily at 9 a.m. the satisfaction of Mutual Life policyholders is furnished by, the fact that whole families and succeeding generations have entrusted their life insurance programs exclusively to The Mutual Life, and each yeat approximately 35% of its new business comes from policyâ€" holders. Mutual Life representative to explain the special features of thisCompany.. Low Cost Life Insurance Since 1869 Note to revellers: The first key you try in the door never fits, so it‘s always a good idea to use the secâ€" ond one first.