~The First Group is sponsored by the Bnai‘ Brith, and hoid their meltâ€" ings at the Hollinger Scout Hall, the Cubs at $.00 P.M. on Tuesdays. The scouts are not having regular meetâ€" ings at present. | . | The Second group is St. Matthew‘s Church and meet at, the hall uruted.lmldnketomflmeflu by different Churches and Clubs. The following information may be of interest to parents who may wish to have their boys join a group are wondering how to make the necessary Tyrone POWER ‘ Alice STARTS SATURDAY ©7.00 P. NL at Holl rt h .M t â€" * ï¬ Cubs at 6.00 P. M. on Wednesday and the Scouts at 7.00 P.M. ; â€" The Bight and. Rileventh are both ‘connected: with The French Churches. The: Kighth troop meet ‘at Hollinger Hall on Friday at 7.00 P.M. and the Eleventhâ€"at St.. Michaels School at 20 PM. for Cubs and at St. Charles schcol at 700 P.M. dor Scouts. The age for Cubs is from eight to twelve, and for Scouts from twelve years and up. I would like to say to parents who may have boys oi these ages, and are inter®sted in getâ€" ting them in to the movement, this is the time to ‘do so. The camping seasdn is very near and there is no better .way ofâ€"giving your boy a chante to "lo someth‘ng for himself than by givâ€" ‘Ing â€"him a chance to go to camp. D. S$. M. ~Some take this news business serâ€" dously. In Camden New Jersey, when J. Arthur Taylor charged that news vendor. Benjamin ‘Thomas had gone after hith with a knife, Thomas exâ€" "plained i# this way. "He rlways ‘reads + es . -‘m m‘ an musmen Tn sasas~ $9 It had fewer scene cuts and discover@d all of a sudden he no any feature picture made by Mâ€"Gâ€"M Ajonger had a ‘pitching arm. Spud and is believed to have esiablish@d 2 Chander, seemingly on the threshold record fcr all of Hollywood. of his greatest season, went overnight Beveral scenes that ord‘narily would jast season.‘ A year ago the Reds‘ Ewâ€" call for six and eight different camera Blackwell was being hailed as the setâ€"ups were filmed in one operation, ) s n‘ pitcher of the year. Today they don‘t resulting in action and dialogue rUDâ€" inowâ€"when he‘s going to be able to urinterrupiedly on the screen €Or PDE"â€" tneow a combat ball for them again. lods of five m‘nutes ard longer. . Cuts a . * A whic hare switches,fro mone scene to â€" The mortuary rate of:pitchers‘ arms another, fro mcne person cr a group Eets higher each season. . What is the to another anr from lor@‘shâ€"ts to close reason‘ Ty Cobb," whg was in: our views and vice versa ‘distrgct audierces town not so long ago, says modern momenwuy while watching a picture, pitChe!'S don‘t last be_cau†they fail according to ‘he proponerts and sus. to take care of themselves; tlzey are ta ned action. They believe that dra. both careless and lazy . .. "In my matic intensity is heightened in cer. day pitchers wore. woolen. sleeves tain types of scenes and sequences by â€"tied on under their arms im street keeping \chanzes cof camera position ‘clothes after working a game. . This cown to a minimum. protected them against sudden‘ drafts Alired Hitcheocck uses susta‘ned ac=â€"and chills. "Now, after a game, they tion camera technique‘to a great deâ€" go around in sport shirts with no gree in his pictures, gcoing even from, sleeves at all, ride in open cars without long chot to closeâ€"up and back as in coats and in ways expose their ~the famous Gregory Peck razor scene®‘arms to the dangerous elements." in "Spelitourd". _ In ‘High Wall", ni voiselle is pitching winning Director Curtis Bernhardt and CAMâ€" pay for the Braves this‘ year. He is eraman ‘Paul Vogel carried sustaned one reason the Boston team; is conâ€" action even further. io o l l P / ue s * somev take this news business serâ€" dously. In Camden New Jersey, when J. Arthur Taylor charged that news vendor Benjamin Thomas had gone aiter hith m a knife, Thomas exâ€" ‘pw t th mv "He rlways reads my. m W n-ver ‘buys." ript for naturalness and realism and hen tried to devise a way in whirh With the exception of January in 1947 the revenue accounted for at this ‘Outport was the smallest in the past two years. Entries in total have also hit a new low and can be attributed mainly to the Restrictions and Quotas imposed on Imports since Nov. 18th Customs Excise Officer Wm. Boyd of the Timmins may have a story to tell as plans formulated recently should have taken him by car to the scenes of the floods now prevailing in British Columbia. Wordâ€"was receivâ€" ed from him at Crow‘s Nest Pass, nothing since said Subâ€"Collector, W. H. Ramsay. $ duty Excise Tax Excise Duty C.ustOm:s Duty Sundry collections Excise Duty . â€"â€"By utilizing the Ro crane, Director ‘Bernhardt explains he was not feâ€" stricted to stationary camera l‘mitaâ€" tions in ‘the grouping of his players. "We forgot the camera entirely at first as we constructed the scenes," he The utilization of doliy or travel shots, mostly used o establish scope, is not new, nsither is overhead filming, but ‘b:th were nsed in "Hgh Wall" in such an unobtrusive manner that auâ€" cientes will not be concious of exdgâ€" gerated camera movement.. Scenes in ‘the picture, even in small areas such as a corridor and cell of an insane asylum, is an xâ€"ray labâ€" oratory and in the lving room cf a flat, were dfilmed from overhead and fom all four sides as the characters moved about in one nonâ€"cut scene. They were photographed in such a way that pbersons witnessing the film have the iMusien ¢f bemg nresent w.‘th the picture‘s characters rather than lookâ€" ing on ~objectively. : ® ‘The fluid movement of "High Wall", with its longâ€"running, minimumâ€"cut scenes was attained mainly through the use of the Ro (Rotating) crane a h\xge apparatus inventedâ€"bo John Arâ€" nold, head of Mâ€"Gâ€"M‘s camera deâ€" partment, from which the camera and the cameraman ars suspended and swung about. Besides having a verâ€" q'cal «and hcr.zcmtal movement, the rane and camera can be revolved so } ,,t 330-degl ee filminz cairbe sittained, then tried to devise a way in which they would ‘he shot. The idea was to it the camera to the action and diaâ€" logue rather than groun cur players to suit the camera." CflStomS, EXCiSe â€"_â€" »~InC on a For Month of May â€" *« "We created the scenes on 104( . 3582.13 117 24880.25 # 143.00 11 _ 7129.35 <to :0..Guess who beat him? °/ 3oung feéllow making his ~first big league start. Grover Cleveland. Alexâ€" * ander., *L 8 vans out to â€" 28â€"7 in arazzle dazzle gamo of the fi ' MW ‘theâ€" roftbull. ‘The third gameé of the schéâ€" m M e $ : police easily showed that\ ére the masters of the situaâ€" bbgln â€"« behind their iron curtain on Tuesâ€" day night and trounced the ‘? y y n team in the leagite," was | the.concensus of opinion. among the These are mérely the two latest inâ€". Algonquin Bouleyard Timâ€" stances where a pitcher lookedâ€"dOwn mins‘ Finest puffed an ran around the and discover@d all of a sudden he NO bpases so many ~times that everyone longer had Aa pitching arm,. Spud wondered wher the merryâ€" RQ-lound} > Aonigl ner. to Texkas on a desper Pouottm wm the flngerprint glass > li s ;s Chander, seemingly on the threshold was going to break down and Taylors of his greatest season, went overnight were go/ig to get a few w-:-w.-:wm. ing him. Grove didn‘t have enough imagination to conceive of disastrous : possibilities .They simplyâ€"rearéed back‘ ‘and let go. . And I think it is flmfï¬- If these two fellows ever cowed by ‘the ‘threat of the lively ! ball they never showed it. Dean, ~of course, was top much of an egotist to admfit ithat any force was capable of m:;uer- Bill Voiselle is pitching winning ball for the Braves this‘ year. He is one reason the Boston team:. is conâ€" sidered a flag threat. . couldn‘t win for the Giants.‘What has brought about this change in ‘the pitcher‘s form? You are told that Billy Southâ€". worth has a way with hardâ€"toâ€"handle ball players. There must be ~someâ€" thing in this because he has had sucâ€" cess with quite a few. Discussing Voiselle here some days pack, the: Boston manager said: "He must have> run 200 miles getting‘his legs in shape this spring." This‘is the basic answer 1 to the â€"change. With the ~Giants, Voiselle took beauty naps in the dugâ€". out. Lazy pitchers don‘t win either,â€" as Cobb points Olit. i Plenty of Oldâ€"Time Gimmicks Any consideration of pitching must be divided into two parts. Baseball became a dxfferent game ‘with the birth of the frisky ball, That was in1920 >»wher »a â€"felow ‘ named Ruth came and. whacked 54 homers. Prior to that period pitchers had the edge. They lasted longer because their labors were arduous. Some of the marks they fathioned / were had a sore‘ arm in hui life and no trainer ever massaged it. ‘It probably is true, as Young inâ€" sists,â€" that too many pitchers pamper . thémselves. Most of them practically. live on the rubbing table. \ They seem to feel that the more an. arm is rubbed ‘the more durable it will beâ€" come. If this is good reasoning, it would seem that they would get betâ€" ter and more direct results pitch-» ing more often. I can go along with, Cobb and Young on their ‘ctiticism but I would want to add two moreé of my own. UA .. i One, I don‘t believe the modern pitcher works often enuogh. Two, I hold that the jack rabbit has become a popular phobia. Dizzy Dean had to throw the boomâ€"boom ball and he was a work horse. In ‘34,. ample, he worked in 50 ball games, pntched 324 innings, won 30 and lost seven. The mo¢ he worked the betâ€" ter he. was.: The same was true of Lefty Grove. In ‘80, ‘31 and..‘32 he pitched ‘a‘ total of 872 innings and won 84 ball games, of his career. eye pOpping ~Like Ed Walsh of the White Sox working 464 innings in 66 games in 19086, and. Jack Chesbrt of â€"the old Highlanders co fullâ€"length games in 1904 But it is pointless to. aï¬tempt' to compare the/ prelively ball days with existing conditions. In the oilden days the pitchers not only threw a dead rock but all sorts. of trick {deliveries weéere permitted and if they wanted to scruff the pball, spit on it, even cut it there were no laws to stop them. Cy Young won 511 games in 22 years with the dead ball. _ Nobody‘s ever going to come close to that figure with the jack rabbit. .. Incidentally, Young, who still lives on aâ€"farm out in Ohio, has his own ideas ‘about what is happening to modern pitchers.â€" He says they pam per. themselves toormuch. He never "Once im a while on cold days I‘d rub it with horse liniment," he conâ€" fessed, sheepishly, as if to guard aâ€" gainst any appea}'ance of marfly wealkâ€" ness. His arm must have been .pretty goo? right up to the finish of his career, toc The last game he pitched he lost by OI‘ Diz Didn‘t Suffer Wwith Pe‘e M‘ cn the mcund the Policemen are a hard bunch to beat. Frank Thompson at the plate, showed up: Tuesday night like a beaâ€" con on the Nova Scotia coast. But the rest of the police team are right in there f.ghting under the old curâ€" tain. The police will no doubt meet their comeupance when they meet ‘the dro team, which, it has been rumoured has been training : hard for the conr "ing fray. Made‘up of young colâ€" }eze men who are just working 0n} the Hydro to get some sun tan and sheckies for the. winter months. the Hydro team is long on brains ‘and brawn. % : The â€" arrgngements . for \playâ€"of?: (semi finals) are: Ist team to imcet 3rd team; 2nd team‘}to meet 4th team, and the best two out of three. In The Timmiins® Police came out from ..# Pool.service Montreal â€" Torento:only; a century nfaintained regular daily. service between Montreal, Toronto* and Chicago.‘\y t . naugurated July 1st 1900 to link.these important centres and the intervening industrial . ‘ regions by fast convenient daily. setï¬ce,‘â€ï¬ie International Limited has been an essentnal + factor in the tremendous dev‘ilopment throughout the area it serves. °> _For 48 continuous years this famous train hag made Â¥gignds for Canada. It has provxded § ‘something special in speedy railway travel ... ‘courtedus service, of ‘course, and every *« _ :comfort of modern equipment. It has assured a smooth ride over a perfect roadbed, wx;h easy: curves and, long tangents i. , double track all the way, with automatic block‘ \ signals. It‘s the short fast soute The Intern onal Limited follows, full of scemc mtetest by day, s1 uing for overâ€"night. travel. â€" Next time, travel comfonably . .. arrive iefuï¬ed on The lntemmonal »» » â€" Limited . . . setvngMontreal, Comwall, Brockmlgr ingstonsar ~Port Hope, Oshawa, Toronto, HamdtoukBmtfogd, Lond% m % +o# * s+/71 he Tntmtionl [ Limited, Canada‘s premiet Ihtematibfldl u‘dï¬n, hu for almost half ' sharp. The games on Sundays will begin at 10.00 am. See you there Aonight. s ‘ ‘ .. COURTESY AND SERVICHE \ \ Whether at home â€" or ‘ “goif:g places" ~â€"‘in all 4oh# ~ contacts with Canadian ithamx p erience â€"