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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1952-2-27, Page 2TNECalVert SPORTS COLUMN 4 &weft '70 04 • THE GENERAL hockey public doubt- lese harbors the idea that referees are a drab, humorless lot of folk, whose principal aim in life is to annoy and harass toiling hockey players, spoil the contests by tooting their whistles, and visit upon the home players penalties which are of course out- rageously unfair and uncalled-for. But the referees are, in fact, a very, pleasant lot of folk, doing a very difficult job, and in the main, doing it extremely well, And most of them ,have a sharp sense of humor, If they didn't, it's doubtful whether they could retain job and sanity. I•Iockey lost a referee of vast color and keen sense of humor when Frank King Clancy decided to hang up his whistle and return to coaching duties, But the fast -talking Clancy did not always get the best of it in verbal exchanges. One night he was being heckled by Babe Pratt, another lad who was very fast on the verbal trigger. Finally, in exasperation, Clancy snapped at Pratt: 'I wish I was playing against you tonight" "Well, ain't you?" innocently responded Pratt, Clancy credited his mental balance in the refereeing field to the hard-boiled veteran Mickey Ion, who refereed for years in the major league. "In my first game as an NHL referee," said Clancy, "I was working with Mickey. When we started for the ice, I was literally shaking, I was so nervous. Ion noticed this, stopped, took me by the arm, and said: 'Don't worry, kid. Remember this: the second after that puck is dropped, there will be only two sane people in the entire house, you and I.'" "I always kept that in mind," Clancy said later, "and I often thought afterwards that Mickey was right." The late Lou Marsh, a rugged citizen and hard-hitting sports writer, refereed hockey games with the same virility that char- acterized his writing. In a small Ontario town one night, a lady fan, seated close to the ice, was giving Marsh a terrific verbal beating. Lou heard, paid no attention. But a play developed that forced a faceoff in front of the belligerent lady. So she screamed at close range: "If you were my husband, Marsh, I'd give you poison." "If I was your husband," Marsh retorted politely, "I'd take it..." Bald, fast -skating George Gravel, is one of the wittier refer- ees of the present era, When a player feigned injury one night, and lay on the ice as if knocked completely out, Gravel said to biro, quite pleasantly: "Please get up. The hockey players need the ice." President Clarence Campbell is a martinet in the matter of enforcing rigidly the rules of the game, and stands four-square back of his referees, has visited sharp punishment on players who tangled with the officials on or off the ice. But when he was a referee, he took a lenient view of player belligerence, In the heat of a Stanley Cup match, Dit Clapper, of Boston Bruins, a notably clean and, sporting player, annoyed at a penalty, tossed a punch at referee Campbell and landed a light, glancing blow of no damaging qualities. Most of those who saw the incident expected dire punishment to be visited on the offender. But Campbell didn't even report it, "Clapper is a nice fellow, always a gentleman, and just lost his head for a few seconds," he said. Your comments and suggestions for thls column will foe welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, e/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St., Toronto. Calver tDISTILLERS LIMITED AMHERSTBURO, ONTARIO Most Of Your Taste Is In Your Nose We take our sense of taste very much for granted, yet it is the least reliable of all our senses, and the easiest to fool. It can be so in- fluenced with one taste that it be- comes incapable of doing its job properly. You are probably quite sure that you can tell the difference between a sweet and a sour apple. But you can be misled quite often because a great deal depends on what you eat prior to the apple. If, for instance, you, have been eating chocolate, and then have a bite of apple, it will taste sour, even if it is really sweet. The reason is that chocolate acts on your sense of taste like opium on the brain. It acts like a drug and overpowers them. Your taste buds, incidentally, are those little pimples which cover the surface of your tongue. They are divided into four sections, one for each of the basic tastes. There are four of these — sweet, sour, bitter, and salt, Generally speaking, the buds sensitive to sweet tastes are on the tip of your tongue, sour on the sides, bitter at the back, while all your tongue is sensitive to salt. That is why, of all tastes, you recognize salt first, because all your taste buds are in combination. The slowest to attract your at- tention is bitter taste, and it might take as long as a second for the buds to work. Taste is the Weary Willie of the senses. It very soon becomes tired. That is why a cigarette tastes best when it is first lit. After a few draws the, taste buds get tired, Lazy Buds They are so lazy that they expect to be continually assisted by the other senses. If you were blind- folded it would .take you a fraction longer to tell the difference between a cup of tea and a cup of coffee. When you can see what it is, your sight notifies your taste buds what to expect. That is why your mouth waters at the sight of something you know is delicious. You will find that although many blind people do smoke it is usually because they smoked before losing their sight, It is very rare for a person to take up smoking after being afflicted by blindness. Tobac- co tastes better when you can see it, thanks to lazy taste buds. Their best ally, is your nose. In fact, without the co-operation of your nose, your taste buds would fold up and refuse to work. You can prove that any time you have a cold in the head, Your nasal pas- sages are affected and you can't taste a thing, With your nose pinched tightly you cannot tell the difference be- tween quinine and coffee. Your mother's idea, when you were young, of pinching your nose while you drank castor oil, was a very good one, for it robbed the castor oil of most of its taste. Another way of fooling your taste buds is to dry them, for they hate working without moisture. Just dry your tongue with a piece of blotting -paper, and whatever you place on it will have absolutely no taste at all. Return in Loaves. In Menasha, Wis., a few days after Mrs, John Gillingham lost her pocketbook containing $500, it was returned to her in the mail, containing $1,810. Slap -Happy — Harvard sophomores Oakleigh Thorne, left, and Richard Mortimer, bang away at each other during their 48-hour face -slapping marathon. Having heard how two of Stalin's Reds set a record of slapping each other 17,26 times, they bettered that mark by one slap. Did You Ever Eat Any `Bret' and `Butyrun'?` Thera is a fascination in words, where they calm from, why we use them—and, In many eases, how they are pronounced properly. Children soon discover this, and few topics appeal to thein snore than food, "Mummy, why is it called butter?" "Why is It called bread?"—and so on. Well, why is it? Strangely enough, most of the necessities: of life—in the food line that is—leave Anglo-Saxon or Teutonic origins,. while luxury foods have French or Latin beginnings, Dave a Go! Bread and butter are cases in point. Bread is an Anglo-Saxon word, derived from the German "brut." Butter—once a luxury—has a Mediterranean origin, coming from the Latin "butyrun." Milk has Dutch and Teutonic beginnings, while junket comes from the French. In old French the word was "joncade" described as "a certaine spoone-meat, made of cream, rosewater and sugar," Junket used to be brought to market on a tray nta'le „f rvrdc, so that the name collies from the Latin word for a reed "junous." These are but a few examples, Next time young Johnny asks "Why?" have a go at solving the mystery. Most Henpecked Men In All The World A traveller in the flogger Moun- tains of the Sahara Desert was re- cently surprised to discover a white woman, Miss Daisy Wakefield, in- habiting a small moil hut in the village of Tamanraset, 1,315 miles south of algiers. She has lived among the Tauregs for fifteen years, where the custom is for men to veil themselves and women to rule. Miss Wakefield, a missionary, went to Tamanraset when she was fifty -too, to translate the Bible into Berber, and has stayed there ever since. She is the only British sub- ject in that tiny French colony, and though the French treat her with respect they look upon her with a certain amount of suspi- cion, believing she belongs to the British Intelligence Service! Fierce Fighters, But . No one knows exactly how or why the Taureg women first start- ed bossing their menfolk, for the male Tauregs are fierce and strong, renowned for their fighting quali- ties. Yet all the laws are compiled by the women, and the men meekly acquiesce. The women own all the camels, tents and such property as the tribe possesses. If they do condes- cend to visit a male, he considers. himself highly honoured; for it is the custom in this barren country for men to pay homage to women. A man must even lavish presents on the ladies if he wishes to remain a guest in Taureg territory. Taureg women are enormous creatures, many of them over six Fishermen's Woes—Visitors from all parts of Ontario will attend the 1952 Canadian National Sportsmen's 'Show in the Coliseum, Toronto, from March 14 to 22. Continual demonstrations of fly, bait and plug casting will be one of the many features of this big springtime exhibition, sponsored by the Toronto Anglers' and Hunters' Association. Here, novice caster Terry Hinds gets some help to untangle his snarled line from Treva Hinds, another mem- ber of the Toronto Anglers' and Hunters' Association. Officials predict the 1952 Sportsmen's Show will be the best ever held in Canada. - feet tall and weighing over four- teen stone. A feature of their dress is the two huge breastplates—as big as soup plates—that they wear. It is not uncommon to find Tau - reg men seven feet tall, tough and muscular; yet they do exactly as their wives dictate. They perform the housework, such as it is, pound millet and look after the babies, while their wives sit around drink- ing strong tea and gossiping At meal -time in this feminine paradise the wives sit over steam- ing wooden bowls of boiled millet, goat's milk, camel's cheese and wheaten bread placed on gr ass mats, while the husbands wait on thein patiently. Only after they have eaten their fill and are toying with coffee, do the men think of • eating. A Taureg goes to immense trou- ble to win a bride. He sings, com- poses love poems and tries to spar- kle at repartee. . Refuses to Feed Him A man comes into his own only when on the back of his camel in the desert. 'tit home he is a glori- fied lackey, for if he disobeys his wife' she can take away his camel and refuse to feed him. As well as laying down the law, Taureg women declare war, too; and when it is over they formulate RT � ,a stixetTc Who was the greatest ail -round athlete of all time? Here in Canada Lionel Conacher is the general choice, South of the border they plump for Jim Thorpe. But over in Great Britain there are a lot of folks who believe that they had, some sixty years or so ago, some- body who could have topped either `Big Con or Indian Jim. ♦ * * He was Alfred Lyttleton, father of Oliver Lyttleton who was re- cently appointed Colonial Secre- tary by Winston Churchill. Alfred himself held the same Govcrninent position between 1903 and 1905 and did a good job too, But it is as an outstanding athlete that he is best remembered. * * * Altred was the best of eight athletic brothers and was consider- ed the finest games player of his day. He was selected to play for England at cricket and soccer, was first class at rugger, distinguished himself at the wall game at Eton, was very good at five until he broke an arm,- represented Cam- bridge at rackets, and won the tennis M.C.C. Gold Prize for many years. This, we might add, was not lawn tennis but the real thing— and a very tough sport to play at that. * 5' * At soccer he was a very strenuous player was specialized in kicking goals and "bunting" his opponents; that is, heaving them with a jerk of the hips. Once, playing against the Royal Engineers, he ran from one end of the field to the other, flooring four men on the way, then kicking a goal. k * * Ile was a Worcestershire man, and the crowds in the Black Country and at Kennington Oval, where cup finals and .other im- portant matches were played, would yell theinselves hoarse with delight when he came charging down the field. During one Varsity match- a collier in cloth cap and muffler stopped Alfred's brother, Edward, and said: "Ha, Lyttel- ton, I'm glad to see you! but it's your brother we all love so. To see him knock 'em down at foot- ball—oh, it does me 'eart good, it does!" * * * , But cricket according to Harvey Day, was his game and he will go down in sporting history for his part in that famous test at the Oval in 1884, when the Australians made 532 for six wickets and the Eng- land skipper, Lord Harris, had given every fielder a turn with the ball. At last, he went over to the wicket -keeper. "Alfred," he said,. throwing him the ball, "you take that end." * * * Alfred Lyttelton kept his pads on and bowled lobs. A miracle, such as Englishmen dream of when faced with stubborn Austra- lian tail -enders; was wrought. In eight overs he dismissed Midwinter, Blackham, Spoflorth and Boyle for eight runs. Yet he never took an- other wicket as long as he lived; * * * A few days before his death he was invited to Bethnal Green, his constituency, to play in a charity match, Though he had not touched a bat for nearly twenty years he made eighty-nine runs and went home stiff, but happy. But, during the game, he was bit by a ball. The blow brought on an internal abscess, and in Less than a week he was dead, the peace terms. Perhaps it best; for when the Tauregs lined up not so long ago to fight the Senussi, The . women decided at the last moment to call the thing off, Once, the Tauregs lived on the shores of the Mediterranean, but the Arab invasion of the -eighth and ninth centuries drove them south. They in turn established a feudal system over the Negroes of the Sudan, who paid them in slaves and grain to keep the Arabs at bay. They have been nomads for centuries, and the fact 'that the men have had to stay away from home for long periods is in all probability the reason for female `supremacy. No Flirting Allowed The women also lay down the terms of marriage and divorce. If a man flirts with another woman, his wife has the right to turn him out of her tent. Sometimes,Taureg women quarrel with their husbands and leave them for other men, in which case the husband may legal- ly claim part of his marriage por- tion. Yes, the Taureg is the most henpecked male on earth. But, as the French slowly penetrate into Taureg territory, their customs will change, and one day, perhaps, the men will gain egdality. But by that time the women in Europe will probably have taken charge, as they are now doing in America. And risen the world over might know the bliss that cotnes from letting someone else take all responsibility, footing the bills and generally trying to make a go of things 1 Forced Wife To Sleep In A Rabbit Hutch The things husbands do to their wives! Every night Andre Galinier gave his spouse a sound beating and then sent her to sleep naked in a rabbit hutch—until at last she turned round and stabbed him. "The things husbands dol" gasped the Bordeaux judge. "We must pity this poor girl." There's one husband who used to hit his wife with live chickens, and another a circus performer, took back his wife's housekeeping money whenever she refused to enter a lion's cage. Both these cases came to light recently in the divorce courts. One man used to beat up his wife with any food that failed to suit his palate. She was lambasted with vegetable pie, puddings and omelettes but when he hit her in the eye with the meat ration she went home to mother. By com- parison, the hubby who shouted, "What, more soup!" was long- suffering. He finally emptied a plateful over his wife .. , but then,, he was a professional soup taster! Such strange marital behaviour has attracted the attention of scientists who have been study- ing the why and wherefores of the strange ways of some husbands. The result of these investigations by the authors of the famed Kinsey Report is being issued in a report entirely devoted to married men. Feared Germs, Banned Kissing There's one hubby who trussed up his wife every night until an eventful evening when neither he nor she could untie the knots and he had to call in the neighbours. Another case to interest the ex- perts is the Detroit citizen who refused to kiss his wife because he was afraid of germs. Nor would he alioyv her to sit on his knee .. Classified . Advertising.. PAID( ouiORS GALT CJAONS for Immediate d,llvort, Order from thea - ad with dopO IL All populer breeds, Lino chicks at reasonable prices. Non -sexed 315.96 per. 100 and UPI pullets 581.00 and up; cocherela 58,00 per 100 and 010 supero .521,40 and up. Write dor Imolai 11010011 Warted chicks, Immo, dint° delivery. Galt Chteketleo, Galt. Ont. BRAY—Baby Atoka, day old and started. Cockerels. Pullota and ,nixed its hatch- ed. Write for prlrea and full Intormntlon, Bray Hatchery, 120 John N., 7lhmlllon, Ont., or I''aIrbtmk reed, 2556 Dutlerin Street, Toronto. DAY old ohlckn may look ,,Into—as much alike us two grains of nand—but the difference. abowo Up In the laying neat. It' will pay you to parotin° ohldta with Record of Performance Unci, of them. Wo purchased over 4,000 winn'banded. pedi- Weed cockerels to: Pae in our brooding pons tido year. Purchase Malta with a definite breeding program back of them. Also startedclicks, older .pullets, broiler chicks, turkey poulta, Catalogue. 'rwJODDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. revolt Ontario SINCE 1988, every year that egg feed rano went down during the winter, farmers bought fewer chicks In the spring, and there wore feweregopro- duced than the year before, Bosun:— Prices averaged higher. We predict high egg prises title °ammo, and Pall. Buy your ueual number of ehloks, don't b0 without pullets thin summer and fall, and when you buy be 0100 to perch:me chtcka with lots of 11.0,P, breeding back of them. 111a purchased over 4,000 R.O.P. pedigreed cockerels to use in our breeding Deno this year. Also started chicks, older pullets and broiler cheeps. Turkey pinata. CatelPAme, O'w10DDLE CHICIK HAT0 0ER1200 LTD. 100,000 Ontario CROSS BREEDS ORDER your chick. now for winter and siring delivery, Croat ' breeds, pure breeds, also three way cross; All breed- ing stock government approved and blood tested. Write for price to Donnie Chick Hatchery. Box 260. Elmira, Ontario, DYEING AND CLEA\rN0 HAVE You anything need. dyeing or clean. Ing? Write tousfor information. we are glad to answer your question.. Do. tartmenl H. Parker's Dye Werke Limited. 791 Yongo St., Toronto. FOR SALE GIVE your car, -truck or tractor a proven ring and valve job while you drive. Stops piston slap and' oil pumping. Put. metallic anti -friction meal on cylinder wall., ringn end valve stems. Licensed under United States - and Canadian Patents. Prim 53,00 prepaid. Bock Saiee Company rmporlore, 201 Palace Street. London, Ontario. 60 ACRE Farm—Good house, 2 barns, grahmry. With hydro, drilled well, on paved road. For further Information con- tact; Mathew Gough 0r Arthur Quinlan, Stratbroy, Ontario. CHOICE clover honey, 12 tours $9; thirties 5545. Amber honey, 12 fours 57: thirties $4, R, Downes, Smlthvllle, Ont DESTROY GOPHERS. RATS. 50080. without endangering with Dotson or Warm. simple. Sate. sure, Information. 51.00. D. Walsh, Garibaldi, B.C. "ARTISTS and beginners" .end for our 09 page . catalogue featuring Artiste' Sutolns and Picture Frames. Send 25e In coin to cover pones,. Powells, 2320 Bloor St., West Toronto. ADVANCED Registry Yorkshire Hoare ready for service 571, Bred Ma 3100. Express -prepaid your etntton. Holstein Bull Calves 3200. Douglas Hart, Wood - Moak. - SAVE Fuel—No-Draft Storm Windows of Transparent Vinyl Plastic. Easily in• stalled by anyone. Order now—one for every window or ,term door. Complete Kit. Size 30 x 72, 31.30 each prepaid. Beck Sales Company Importer.. 230 Palace Street. London, Ontario. ' HOLDRITE EGG CARTONS Special 'Introductory price on moulded fibre e x 4, ono dozen egg cartons, 017.00 Dor 1000 oortonn or 84,50 per 260 carton., 1100L0E1) FIBRE LTD. Brantford, Ontario FARM Implements and machine shop 801l - complete leading repit alto pa andwelding rm h equl- ment. Box 728, New Llakenrd. RASPB RY Certified R910,0, Plants. Cuthbert, t,a hamrnTay- lor. Viking. 58,00 per 100, expre00 pre. paid. A. B. :reckon. Stoney Creek, Ont. FOR Sale: Portable ,nw mill and Rumoly Tractor, Fred Black, Goole, Ontario. 'rim) RICK—"Tho' Goat strawberry I aver tooted." t•EPTEMIIIIRAsst 'twb urnb raspberry. VALENTINE—Beat new rhubarb. Write Petmo Park Perennial Gardena, Weston, Ont. , .. because she spoiled the crease of his trousers! Then therd's the northern hus- band who objected so strenuously to his wife's, driving that he reach- ed from his seat and pulled her hair, boxed her ears and twisted her wrist. He ended up in court charged with dangerous driv- ing l Dumplings Plea for Divorce Fortunately the law appreciated his viewpoint and the case was withdrawn. Less .lucky was the Parisian who recognized his wife among the nude dancers in a cab- aret show and promptly climbed on the stage and slapped her face. A judge decided. he had a right to assault his wife but awarded dam- ages for spoiling the floorshow. The things husband dol And yet when a St. Louis man claimed a divorce because his wife's dump- lings stuck to the roof of his mouth, the judge refused. "i'm afraid you must do what all hus- bands have to do," the judge ad- vised. •"You must simply put up "with its" ran SALE SEWDBl TrY our Always Tender Beet, Send foo far sample and tree catalogue, Arthur Vosey, York. Prince ltdwdrd Te - land. BRED L'einal° 1,1150 for sale, Breath of Spring Sllvorblus, Sllverhlua, Royal and Imperial Wu:tele, whelp,, and standards, Guaratnteed, 28 yrs, ranching. 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Apply by letter tot Mammas Subsertnllon Service, Box 191, Walkerton, Ontario, • PATENTS AN -OFFER to every Inventor-Llenot In. %mations and full information 0001 tree. rho Romany Co., Rogletored Patent Allot, neva, 573 Rank Street, Ottawa, FETBERSTON1IAOGH •A Company, Pa- tent Solicitor., Eatabllnhed 1850, 150 Bay Street. Toronto Rookie, of informa- tion en reoueei SALESMAN WANTED SALES Stimulator Saloamen. Hers is. as opportunity to make up to 1100,00 a day. 520.00' commission on every 5110.00 sale You make. Them Is a golden opportunity for former omse DE,tt" salesmen. Pricing Press, P.O. Box. 74, Station "R". Montreal 10, P.O. HON TO TR,RAT CURB, CORKS, KICKS, ETC. Bathe.. injury twice a" „ii day with oil. Ude on sprains, swelling,, diff joints too. At dealers' for 85 years. 5T -1I 1 Was Nearly Crazy With Fiery Itch Until f di. ovorcd Dr, D. D: Dam onnIs'azin'- ly fast relief—DD. D. Proscription. word popular, ths pure, cooling, liquid medication speeds 01100 tied comfort' froth cruel itching I,y eczema, Dimnles, rashes, sthlotc u fpo1 0nd 001,0, ltok lrou,loa, Trial belles 3510 Pira opmonelon ehodts oven gi mast neons. Bch or moony brei, Ask or fsrr, D D. Proscription (ordinary er 0x1,0 strength). ISSUE 9 — 1952 ROLL YOUR OWN BETTER CIGARETTES W/TH CIGARETTE TOBACCO