HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1952-6-18, Page 7TH CalVert SPORTS COLUMN
7
• Thin sly nut be a iSed'up time to
locuas' i -Ing, Strati §Port while pee grown
ti ro`
,popularity in`" les ' Domintotaeby .the
p is j ops an i lupe cler- Zit it might
e as good a"time^wetly tq discuss a Cana-
, dian slci-er destined for .yen more fameuq" y 8e, than.b ha.s'.already acquired, who started
hs carek eto.','it3CbsersItoit( blades•when Ile gyps only eight years old.
We realways intrigued by those atijries ofathletes who• hit%e
devoted their lives to perfecting technique in their favorite spuprt,
slang a youngn named Ernie McCulloch, native•og the little
ft Quebec city of£hree Rivers, undoubtedly comes in that categgty.
Here, we believe, ,its one , of, the 'really great Canadian athletes of
ur time, and even though warm suns are shining on the grass
1 the trees are,01{k;;Iea£> we feel we should deyote a column to
rising his praises.
tt�\
McCulloch. Climassfd'a brilliant icareer last winter 'when,he
captured the sic± -tug Grand' ,'Slam,\- neveraccomplished before
by Canadian, American or European for that matter.
His phenomenal feat began when he captured the National
Giant Slalom at Alta, Utah, followed with a smashing victoryin
the Aspen North American championships, He went on fom
there to capture top honors fn the National .He
champion-
ships at White Fish, Montana, and his final triumph was in the
Harriman Cup at Sun Valley.
rr .. When you . consider he was competing against the very best
in North America, and a field that included a sprinkling of Earner
European champions, you get a quick vision of his greatness.
When McCulloch began his ski-ing career at the ripe age of
eight years, he started practice jumping on a hill behind hie
home, and by the end of his first season, was jumping 40 feet.
By the time he was 13, he had already captured schoolboy
jumping meets in Montreal, Toronto, Quebec City and Ottawa.
The long, lean youngster already had made a name for himself in
the Three Rivers Ski Club with a record jump of 114 feet.
At this stage of the game, McCulloch began slalom and down-
hill work. At IS he entered the downhill race in the Quebec City
championships and finished second.
There's no such thing as ski-ing cautiously with Ernie. It's go-
go -go from start to finish. His record of 56 seconds down the
precipitous slopes of Mount Baldy in Sun Valley, is still a challenge
for other stars. One young racer who completed tjle gruelling grind
in a little over a minute remarked: "I dont see how anybody could
possibly have gone faster than I did today without breaking his
neck." Ernie didn't break his neck but was a full four seconds
better than the aspirant to his title.
In 1949 Ernie rode to International glory on specially -designed,
self -constructed akiis. He beat the entire French team, consisting
of Henri Creiller, George Panisset and Coutet.
McCulloch won the Harriman cup again this year and if he
wins again, becomes the only skier in history to take the award
three times.
All this being so, we thought we'd write a column about a
great Canadian athlete who has been overlooked.
Your comments ond suggestions for this column will be welcomed
by Elmer Ferguson, 5/0 Calvert House, 431 Yonge St., Toronto.
CaLvtt DISTILLERS LIMITED
AMHERSTBURG, ONTARIO
Some Tales About
,Jimmy Durante . • .
M an age when most men are
Jimmy Durante is still a bundle
of dynamic energy.
Four things place him apart from
nose, a gravelly voice dat moid-
Ora de English language, a unique
strut, and innate good humour.
At the top of his profession, Jimmy
is still an unaffected guy with
pimple wants, and he knows more .
than anyone the meaning of "com-
ing up the hard way."
He earns a fabulous salary, but
ti good deal of it goes to charity.
He's never yet denied a loan or
sift to anyone, and once he con-
fided to a friend: "I only wish I
was a financial typhoon like Rock -
in fellow."
Shrinkin Violence
His extraordinary capacity to
mangle English is part -natural,
part -developed. Nowadays he de-
stroys pronunciation .automatically.
Son of an Italian barber, he was
'born in the slums of New York,
and never had a real education,
Audiences get a big Laugh out
of his nose, but he confesses that
as a kid it used to worry him. "I
was shrinking violence. Every time
I went down the street, I'd hear:
"Lookit the big -nosed kid(' And
when anybody'd look my way,
I'd just sneak off. All through
life, even when I am making a for-
tune on account of my big beak,
at no time was I ever happy about
it."
In his 'teens he worked seven
days a week, from eight at night,
till six in the morning, as a cafe
pianist. In 1910 he was workin in
a New York dive that was so
tough, "if you took your hat off
you were a,wsissy." Then he moved
to another joint, where he played
from eight o'clock "'until I was
subconscious."
During the First World War he
teamed up ,with a dancer -baritone
called Eddie Jackson, and led a
small dance band in various clubs.
One day a girl who was later to be
his wife, walked into the club and
asked for an audition. He accom-
panied her on the piano, but she
was a soprano. Jimmy didn't like
sopranos and said so. "Whoever
told you, you could play the
piano?" the girl said spiritedly.
jimmy retorted: "Them is the con-
ditions that pervail."
Frequent Brawls
When prohibition came into
force, night clubs sprang up every-
where, serving the liquor behind
locked doors. Because he was
talked into it, Jimmy started his
own club. There he met a soft-
shoe dancer named Lou Clayton,
and shortly afterwards America
took to its heart a new team of
entertainers billed as Clayton, Jack-
son and Durante.
The team prospered—and so did
the club. I. was a decade of loose
money and racketeers, "To pre-
vent - gunplay on the premisea,"
records gene Fowler in "Scltnoz• a
zoia," his biography' of Durante,'
all•
air
,r
Is,
Id
ng
ed
on
hat
d,
r 8'
n-
or
as
at
n-
0
to
d
y
e
d
n
f," Clayton made it a rule that
ntarlcsmen had to turn in: th
if 1 , side arms ,0±1 entering the room,
o'r ',But there were frequent braw
peace -loving Jimmy woe
disappear. to all-night cafes, waiti
tp ° till things had quieted down.
„Sro:'„Several tinies in his money ma
,fa riiug 'career Jimmy \i as threaten
.Ibby,” gangsters, but Lott Clayt
t• 'knew the underworld and saw t
r" the comedian was well prptecte
c 1 'During Prohibition gangs t e
weren't the °hit' people after Jir
ff -toy., The -Police arrester' bim f
4!edliing liquor, but sentence. se
shepended With }yarning th
,s Slit ever he Was 'naught serving
esssiollter drink, he" Would have, to g
•'to jailJlirinS never erred again
Clayton; •'Jackson and Duran
split up when Jimmy was offered
a personal contract in Hollywoo
nearly twenty years ago. Clayto
became his manager and Jimm
began his film career. But he mad
a series of bad pictures which di
nothing to enhance his carrer, s
he decided to return to the stag
for a while.
"What Elephant?"
In 1935 he opened in a Broad
way show which was a smash hit
Jimmy recalls that before the firs
night was particularly worried abou
one line that he had to deliver. 0
stage with an enormous live ele
phant that he was supposed to
be stealing. a sheriff walked 011 and
shouted: "What hat arc you doing with
t hat elephant?" Jimmy looked
round in bewilderment and replied:
"What elephant?"
At first this line didn't seem
very funny to hint, and he wanted
to cut it, but it proved to be one
of the biggest laughs of the even-
ing.
Talking of elephants, he was
once embarrased by an unintention-
al laugh when he heard two fellows
train passengers disussing Africa.
"I've seen some fantastic things
in Africa." one man remarked. "in-
cluding an elephants' graveyard.
The great beasts sometimes travel
as much as two thousand miles
to die there."
The astounded Durante thought
about this information for a while,
then he tapped the speaker on the
knee. "It's the trip," he suggested,
"that kills them."
By 1943 Jimmy was so short of
money that he went back to night-
club engagemnts. That year his
wife died and he lost all confidence
in himself. It was a long time be-
fore Clayton could persuade him
to go back to work.
"But when the band plays," said
Jimmy later. "you forget even your
griefs for a moment. You forget
everything until you come off. Then
when you come off, you flop
down."
His night-club act was a big suc-
cess. Hollywood beckoned again,
and a new generation discovered
the little man with the rasping
voice. "I borrowed dat note from
Caruso; he was glad to get rid of
it.")
Back to Work
Then he was signed tip for a
radio series. His poularity has been
so great in recent years among
actors and audiences alike that
when he went into hospital for a
serious operation, top ranking enter-
tainers like Bob Hope, Red Skel-
ton, and the late Al. Jolson took
over his radio show without any
fee until he was fit again.
He was booked to appear at the
Palladium two years ago, but his
old friend and partner Lou Clay-
ton, died and the engagement was
postponed. Clayton's death upset
him almost as much as his wife's,
but Jimmy went back to work and
felt his way gingerly into American
television studios. Loyal to his
friends, he is also loyal to his old
jokes, but the youngsters hadn't
heard them before, and in the last
few months his success as an en-
tertainer has been unsurpassed.
This is the kind of experience he
Canadian Pa tillgs Greatly Atijji`.irrttfsspnyl a �veritfsrflg.Sccf>rpalgnpublished anyWkeYr have ever
received mor favorable comment than the'" Seagram Tells the Wer dtAbOut Canada" compaign.
At the racent'Canadian International Trade Fair in Toronto the original paintings on which the
advertisements were based were a feature of th e Seagram display --part of, which ' is picturiw
here—end were admired by many thousands of visitors from all parts of the world.
,g r•
Unve Ie
1,- j ,Si-,Giris�leBrrr embro'i8cr�i in gwlorpccar±_schooL•-But most
MalroYean girls•sfay home; never learn to read or write.'
has been ctllaLLDg on his•TV pro-
'grkntmes: t: -s. -
"I'.n1 lyin' on the -park bench -
takin' my siesta—as is my wont—
when along" comes a buchao€r, flies:,,
and settles on any. nose.
"I Jets 'em loiter — live and let
live is my looter. '
"Den a bete conies along—lights
on my nose and stings me. Dat
does it,' I says, 'Dere's always -gotta
be a, smart aleck in every crowd.
Now, Jost for that — .EVERY-
BODY OFFI" . -
Or how about this one?
How Right!
"I sings for the Sultan of Pascha,
and he says to me 'Jimmy, to
show my 'appreciation, I'm gonna
give you 500 Wives.' I turns him
down flat. He says to Rte: 'Jimmy,
why do you refuse this modest
compensation?' I says to him:
•
'Your Highness, who wants to find
a thousand stockings ltangin' in
da bathroom every morning?"
Almost everyone loves to hear
Jiminy Durante's stories. But when
hd was a 'teen age piano player
!mocking out dance tunes in dingy
New York cafes, he always thought
he'd The nothing more than a sec-
ond-rate musician. ,
31e'teamed up for a short while
with' a singing waiter called Eddie
Cantor, who once said to him:
"You"1I never ,get anywhere as an
ordinary -pianist, Jimmy,. . You've
got'to liave personality. Why don't,
you talk to the customers—make
remarks—while you're at the
piano?"
Shy young Jimmy Durante re-
plied .seriously: "I couldn't do that,
Eddie, l'd be afraid people would
laugh at me."
How right he wast
Deserved Rebuke
The claims of 4,000 Ford strikers for unemployment benefits arising
out of their Christmas wildcat walkout have been tossed out by the
Unemployment Insurance Commission's Umpire, Mr. Justice Alfred
Savard.
And rightly sol
Through their union, the strikers claimed they were entitled to un-
employment insurance from the day the strike ended until work was
fully resumed nearly two weeks later.
The two-week interval was required to get enough of the strike
damage repaired to permit resumption of operations.
.The same union tried the same stunt in connection with the recent
walkout of Ford office workers. This time, the union put up the argument
that production `workers weren't out on strike at alt but were kept off
the job by the office employees' picket lines, therefore were entitled to
unetnployment pay.
Apparently, they're, not going to get away with this either, Though
they can still appeal, Ottawa UIC has ruled against them. And with good
reason.
No one knows better than the auto union that by no stretch of a
labor -leader's imaginationivas it intended that the Unemployment, Ip,
surance. fund to be used to finance a strike.
Its original and sole concept was rainy -day protection and that's the
way it should continue. —From The Financial Post
People Collect
'Most Anything
A number of fromologists ' re- .
cently met in London.
Experts in their own line, fro-
mologists are collectors of cheese
labels, and in case you think this
hobby provides a limited field of
research, there are 10,000 different
specimnts of the cheese label
designer's art.
But fromologists are not the
most remarkable of the world's
collectors, There are many people
who cannot resist model elephants,
bottle tops, handcuffs, bus tickets,
thimbles, menus, artificial flowers,
and even train destination boards.
Headless
One ardent collector devoted his
life to amassing various kinds of
seaweed.. Another man who col-
lected perfumes had several hun-
dred different varieties.
At an exhibition recently held in
London some of their amazing' col-
lections were shown to the public
for the first time,
One enthusiast had amassed an
assortment of nails. Some were
more than a foot long, others too
small to be seen with the naked
eye.
Among then( were nails made of
fron, wood, ivory, and flint. There
were square, round and curved
nails. Others with ornamental
heads, and some with no treads at
all.
A schoolgirl collects fingerprints.
This young dliclylographist' daily
1 adds to her library of interesting ,
impressions by carrying about with
her a pad and a tin of boot polish)
"King" of autograph Collectors
is probably Frerl Boson, Cockney
6r author and broadcaster, Mr. Bison
SOSSOSS'•i 'natures, ranver l
ranging from lthatfamous of Pay -
lova to Somerset Maugham.
A Norfolk doctor became fas-
cingted by the, number and variety
of coalhole liras he encountered on
his daily rounds, Since he could not'.
actually acquire these useful ob-
jects, he made sketches of them
which were later published In book
form.
A Canadian collects misspelt
words in all kinds' of printed mat-
ter, He has over 10,000 sucli'4*-'
emotes. A South African govern-
ment official specializes in the ac-
quisition of driving licences. So
far he has specimens from more
than 48 countries. Henry Schmul,
an American, collects pictures . of
"outsizes" in everything. Hit col-
lection includes an actual bus ticket
37 feet long.
Conte of these "crazy collections"
eventually bring their' owners
wealth as well as fame. A Camden
Town man who began collecting
military buttons svlren he was a
boy, subsequently sold his hoard
to an American millionaire for
£30,000.
Famous people as well as the
more obscure indulge in the mag-
pie habit. Earl Baldwin, former
Prince Minister, used to collect
stuffed owls. H. G. Wella; the
author, bad a fine collection of lead
soldiers, as also did Napoleon.
Baron Rothschild collected fleas,
but these were for scientific pur-
poses.
No Limits
Mr. Churchill's famous collection
of hats ranges from a Russian fur
cap ;to a cowboy's stetson, and he
has worn theme all.
There is no limit to 'the odd as-
sortment of articles which fascin-
ate the human magpie. A London
butcher collects vehicles, So far
his search has brought llinr more
than fifteen, ranging from a han-
som cab to a centuries-old stage
coach.
Probably the strangest collection
ever to be made was acquired by
ttvo elderly globe trotting spin-
sters. .
'During their lengthy travels they
crrfully recorded every echo they
heard!
THRIFT; GIFT
An actress came off thestage
after a successful first night, and
wits surprised when the manager
handed her a bunch of flotveis and
a packet of marigold seeds,
"The flowers are,, froth a gentle-
men in the stalls, >otisf the seeds
from a Scotsman Ill; lith .gallery,"
was his explanationy
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TREMENDOUS INVESTMENT INCOME
On account of serl0u, operation, phyalclan
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The only implication that Fuchs
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The Ramsay Co., Registered Patent Atter-
nems 273 Beek Street, Ottawa.
PETRER8T0NHACOH & Company, Pa-
tent Solicitor.. Eetabllohed 1850. 300
Bay Street, Toronto Rookie& of Intemea.
Linn e0 re0ueet •
LOGY, LISTLESS,
OUT OF LOVE
WITH LIFE?
liter, wake up your liver bile ...
ti jump out of bed ruin' to go
Life not worth living? It may be the liver!
It's a food If your liver bile L not Sowing
freely your food may not digest ... gee
bloats up your otomach ... you feel con -
.63 *1.d and all the fun and sparkle go out
of life. That'o when you need mild, genal
Carters Little Livor Pill,. You nee Cartels
help etimuletq your Ever bile till once again -'
Itis Pouring out ata rate of up to two pinta.
day Into your digestive trout. This should
fur you right up, make you feel that happy
dny,, are here again, 8o don't slay sunk get
Carters Utile Liver Pine. Always have them.
on band. Only 80, from any struggle!.
rr
EXPORT`
CANADA'S E-fNES,T
CIGARETTE
a
ISSUE 25 — 1952
HOT, TiRED
FEET:'
Soothe them
(quickly and effectively.
Get fast -drying Mioard's
,'‹ ' Lipiment—rub it on. Feel
the coolness—get relief, IN ekl