HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1952-6-25, Page 2.rT?FIs.
a1ve t SPORTS COLUMN
6 sema 9elfetioff
• Don't let that old man with the hour
glassget on your nerves. Anytime you begin
to' feel that the year may be catching up
with you, or even passing you, think of
Willie Hoppe, who "won another billiards
championship the other day,
Maybe a ball player br fighter is an
"Q14 man" at 3S. Once upon ;a time a track athlete who survived
30 was a miracle. You may be greeted with a negative 'shake of the
head when -you solicit a job at the age. of 40. Doc Osier (wonder
what became of the Doc?) wanted to chloroform u$ alt at 60.
But don't let such gloomy, thoughts depress you. Sport, which
is,one of the common denominators of our life and times, points
a, few examples to prove that middle age isn'tne s the b e end
of everything. And we think Willie Hoppe, king
world, le one of the most notable of these.
Willie started his career away back in the nineties, which
were not necessarily gay. He was then a lad In short trousers.
He was so tiny he had to stand on a box to cue the ball while
playing, so they called him The Soap Box Champion."
Even then bis father, who was coaching him, had big things
in view. And he had a fine subject to work with, because Willie
Moir orders like a soldier, He had a genius for hard practice. And
the result began to bear rich fruit at an early age.
They took Hoppe to France, where balkline billiards was at
its peak. They had "academies" where fans wagered freely on cue
matches. And great men played in them. One was Vignaux, the
champion. At 17 Hoppe defeated Vignaux. He became world
champion. And thereafter he became such an outstanding exponent
of his craft that he remained champion for 17 years. From the
"Soap Box Champion" be became "The Boy Wonder." Now, in
his sixties, he's still champion at his trade, after recovering from
a nervous breakdown that threatened to end his playing career.
It took two or three years to cure it.
So, as we said, don't let the years get you down. We could
wade into the statistics to show you that Clarence DeMar was a
marathon champion in his forties; that Bob Fitzsimmons was still
a world heavyweight boxing champion at 36, and that Jersey Joe
Walcott, the present champion, according to some estimates, is
now 45 years old.
And then there was Bill Cook, surviving World War I, and
a couple of years campaigning on other war fronts after that, who
came back to take up his hockey stick with New York Rangers and,
in his forties, win recognition as one of hockey's great right
wings of all time, And there was Big Bill Tilden who, in his forties
too, could beat practically all the younger stars on the tennis
courts. And little Aurel Joliat, who played hockey for 17 con-
secutive seasons with Canadiens, and Eugene Tremblay, probably
the greatest wrestler Canada ever produced, who in his fifties was
almost unbeatable among the lightweights.
So don't let the years gat you down. A lot of folk have been
able to rise above the shadows of Time.
Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed
by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge SR, Toronto.
Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED
AMHERSTEURO, ONTAR10
In a recent issue of LOOK there
was an article written by Rogers
Hornsby in reply to a piece by Ty
Cobb, published in an earlier issue
of the same magazine. Cobb had
said that modern baseball—and
modern ball players, with few ex-
ceptions—had slumped in quality
considerably since his day.
* * *
Mr, Hornsby proceeded to rip
Cobb from stem to gudgeon, what-
ever that means, He not only inti-
mated that Tyrus Raymond didn't
know what he was talking about.
He also said- that he—Hornsby—
wouldn't rate the Georgia Peach as
better than sixth on a list of all-
time all-star outfielders.
* * *
We were just about fo sit down
and"Tieat out a column hinting that
Melon King—Albert Ray, 64, has
been juggling melons on his
Jihad dvrjng 40 years of danc-
ing, Dubbed the "Watermelon
King,` Ray says he's never
dropped his "crown;' since he
Substituted a watermelon for a
pumpkin,
Hornsby—what with that St. Louis
heat and one thing or another—
must have blown his top, but good,
to talk or write such nonsense.
But before we gst around to doing
so, the roof fell in on The Rajah;
in fact he was fired from his job
as St. Louis Browns' manager just
about the time his magazine blast
at Cobb hit the newsstands.
* * *
So we thought to ourself, "What
the heck's the use of kicking a man
when he's down?" and didn't write
said column.
• * *
Arthur Daley of The New York
Times apparently had similar
thoughts regarding Hornsby, the
only difference being that he went
ahead and wrote his piece. He also
said what we had in mind so much
better than we could hope to do'
that from here on we are letting
Mr, Daley take over, with many
thanks for the assist on a day so
warm that even just banging a type-
writer with two fingers is a real
chore. Almost as much of a chore
as it is in any other kind of wea-
ther. Come in, Mr. Dacey.
* * *
Rogers Hornsby is having trouble
enough these days. Yet it is impos-
sible to leave unchallenged one ridi-
culous statement he made in a ma-
gazine rebuttal to Ty Cobb's ori-
ginal blast against the modern ball
players. The Rajah destroyed the
efficacy of his arguments by the
malicious way lie omitted' the Geor-
gia Peach from his All-Star team,
Named in the outfield were Shoe-
less Joe Jackson, Tris Speaker and
Babe Ruth with Joe DiMaggio and''
Ted Williams also ranked ahead of
Cobb.
* * *
The easiest way to answer that
silly estimate is to point to the re-
cord book. Cobb practically owns
it. He has the highest lifetime ave-
rage in the history of the game,
a breath -taking .367. Ile won the
American League batting cham-
pionship twelve times in thirteen
years. For twenty-three consecu-
tive years he hit over ,300, thrice.
soaring over ,400. He had the most
times at bat, runs, hits, stolen bases
and sundry other items,
* * *
Does that sound like the No.
Six outfielder? Let's look over the
Other five men. Ruth was a better
distance slugger; Speaker and
DiMaggio were slicker fielders, and
both Jackson :lid Williams were
more gifted natural stylists at the
No Larceny Today—Outfielder,Hank Bauer of the New York Yank-
ees is out at second on an attempted steal. Johnny Pesky, Tigers'
shortstop, applied the tag after taking peg. from catcher Joe
Ginsberg. Ump is Scotty Robb.
plate. But Cobb was overwhelming
in what Eddie Stauky once des-
cribed as 'the intangibles."
* * *
The major leagues probably never
had a fiercer competitor or a smart-
er one than Tyrus Raymond Cobb.
This reporter's favorite story is one
uncovered by Tom bfeany. It's so
illustrative of Cobb's temperament
that it stands repeating. The Geor-
gia Peach was an eager and rest-
lessly ambitious minor leaguer then
playing for Augusta in the Sally
League. He roomed with Nap
Rucker, the pitcher, and it was their
habit to dress and undress in their
rooming house.
* * *
One day Rucker was knocked out
of the box and already was in the
tub for a leisurely bath when be
heard Cobb dash into their bed-
room. Never before had Rucker
beaten Cobb to the tub, He could
hear Ty pacing back and forth like
a caged tiger as he snapped tartly
at Nap for his slowness.. The pit-
Cobb's brain was generating on
all cylinders every instant he was
in, a ball game, He never stopped
thinking. Often he'd be thrown out
on what looked to be needlessly.
foolish base -running gambles, but
therewas a motive behind every
such move. The artful Cobb was
plotting. He'd try for that extra
base to test a throwing arm or
the'way the fielder made a tag. This
would'. be done in a lopsided game
so that Cobb would have the solu-
tion ready for the 1-0 game.
* * *
For instance, he made a habit
of overrunning third base in order
to force a throw from the slick -
fielding Hal Chase. A pattern thus
was established, so one day he
thundered into third from second
and Chase made the throw. The
third baseman swooped down his
glove for the tag. However, Cobb
was on his way hone with the
winning run. Only Cobb could score
regularly from second on an infield
out.
Average
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cher answered flippantly. Sudden-
ly Cobb burst into the bathroom
. and savagely grasped Rucker by the
throat.
"Have you gone crazy?" gasped
Rucker after fighting him off.
"Nap, you just don't understand,"
said Cobb despairingly.. The blood
drained from his face as the satanic
gleam faded from his eye. "I've
just gotta be first—ail the tine."
That's the way he played baseball
too.
From a purely physical. stand-
point Cobb's greatest gift was his
speed of foot• How he capitalized
on itl He performed for most of
his career in the era of the dead
ball when one run often was the
only run of the ball game. Ty bad
none of the b.,tting grace of Horns-
by's five candidates, but he was a
smarter hitter than all of them com-
bined.
« * «
He spaced his hands on the bat,
using a choked grip. Then he
punched the ball, placitig every shot
with artful ease. Deep -fielding play-
ers invited him to bunt. So he did.
If they played him tight, he aimed
for the holes to either side. On top
of all that was his frightening speed
that made every throw a hurried
one. That always was his primary
idea, to keep relentless pressure
applied everywhere.
* * *
He played with brains as well
as brawn. When Walter Johnson
went up to the majors, no one could
hit Isis blinding speed, including
Cobb. Then Ty learned that the
Big Train had a dread of killing
a batter with his fireball.
* * *
"It wasa shameless thing to do,"
Cobb sheepishly confessed to me
a few years ago, "but I took ad-
vantage of Walter's gentle' nature.
I knew he wouldn't bean - me, and
so l crowded the plate, forcing him
to pitch where 1 wanted him to
pitch. Soon I was hitting him as if
I owned him."
Any time Cobb . got on , a base
a mass case of the jitters: would
descend on the enemy team. He
drove everyone crazy. There is just
no way of estimating the number of
games he won by his very presence
on the diamond.
As a hitter he had no equal.
Nor did he have one as a base -
stealer, since the swift Georgian
stole a record total of 892 bases,
including 96 in one season. As an
outfielder he was good without be-
ing great, definitely not so adroit
as Speaker or DiMaggio, probably
not so good as Ruth, but superior
to Williams and Jackson. And
Hornsby names him No. Sixl
Got A 700 Year's Job
Lucky is the man, especially if 11e
works for himself, who has enough
raw materials to enable him to car-
ry on for the rest of his life, But
there is one man living near, Mob-
berley, North Cheshire, who has
enough materiai for 700 years.
He sells block of peat, that black,
aromatic, slow -burning stuff which
as yet IS unrational. It burns in
open hearths and wrought -iron
cradles, glowing red and giving out
an inttense,,upiform heat,
In such parts of England as peat
can be obtained, it is sold for 3dr
a block, but in North Cheshire
this otvtter of a private bog sells
it at 8 shillings for'100'biocks. And
he could get rid of a million blocks
if he had them ready, so ,great is
the demand.
Each blocic is h by 7 by 3 inches,
and when freshly cut holds about
7 ib. of water; They have to be
dried in the open, and either frosty
or sunny weather is tate best iatA
drying. Sonia of the peat is made
into firelighters by treating it with
oll and cutting and pressing into
suitable blocks.
etFaage'tf the Druma
When the King died in irebruary
the natives of Central Africa -fere
discussing his death is their kraals
before the local district officers
heard the news,
It was the sante' when King
,George V 'died, It has been the
same on the Dark Continent for
centuries, the deep thrabbipg notes
of the jungle "dru111s sending their
message of sadness, joy and danger
along the jungle paths.
When Gordon' died at Khartoum,
on January 26th., ,.885, the bazaars
of Mombasa,two thousand miles
away, buzzed' .with the ROWS the
following day.'
• Thougli' the !drams • have fallen
into disuse itt villages near the
white man's cities and towns, they
are 'still the jungle wireless in re-
mote areas, and 'modern travellers
'stilt` find; as did' Livingstone, that
"as soon as one leaves a kraal
the drums begin to 'talk,'"
The beat of the drun}s is not
a jungle code, or a jpmhle of noise
reflecting various moods. They
actually talk words by imitating
the sounds of the human votes,
A "male" drum is tuned to re-
flect the low notes, while a
'remale" drum mimics the higher
tones.
The larger *drums of the kraals
transform the syllables of the
tribes' languages, and there may
be a hundred such syllables.
But the skilled drummer can in-
troduce variations for his drum
by the addition of "tuners." He may
add pieces of wax or rubber tothe
drumhead, and bells or rings in-
side the drum, Special drumsticks
made from different kinds of wood
also increase the repertoire of
notes.
When a single drum is used the
hide is stretched over the drum -head
to ensure different tones at dif-
ferent points.
But the most amazing drums of
all are those used by some tribes
in the Belgian Congo. They use
a basic jungle- language of only
two tones, which are made by cut-
ting the wood thicker on one side.
But as different words may have
the sante tones the drummers
have to memorize a wide range of
descriptive phrases. So instead' df
risking confusion by saying "It is
going to rain," they may drum
out, "Badman, son of disease, is
coming down on clods of earth."
The chief's drummer usually be-
gins with his own call -sign repeat-
ed two or three tines.
The follows the call -sign of the
headman to whom the chief wishes
to speak.
On acknowledgment, their bus-
iness then follows, and a series of
beats on a low note ends the
message.
For those drummers who miss
the chief's message the usual
penalty demanded by the chief is
carried oat—"Off with his ears".
But the drums are not used solely
for the transmission of news. They
have a communal purpose, too.
When the natives, under state sup-
ervision, are buildine bridges and
roads, a drummer is constantly
playing his accompaniment to the
shouting and singing of the work-
ers.
When epidemics rage the drums
play for hours, beating out the ap-
peal of the jungle people: "Disease,
go down river."
Beetle Rescues A
$100,000,000 Crop
Appearing suddenly overnight,
vast numbers of ladybirds have
saved the farmers' crops of peanuts
in the Vaal -Hartz settlement in
Andalusia, . Transvaal. The crops
were being devoured by the aphis
and farmers had tried every means
of Wiping it out, but the leaves con-
tinued to wilt before their eyes.
Frantic appeals were sent to Pre-
toria and a special powder poison
was dispatched to the settlenient.
But before it could reach the far-
mers, along came the ladybirds.
Nature had stepped in. Their lar-
vae speckled the peanut plants
white and massacred the deadly
deadly aphis, saving the crops from
t uin.
Said one farmer: "But for the
ladybirds' timely arrival, 15,000
tons of shelled nuts—about 25 per
cent, of South Africa's total out-
put—would have been lost. it was
dike' a miracle." No wonder the
children of Vaal -Hartz are now
singing: "Ladybird, ladybird, don't
fly away home"!
Before the war Britain's only
ladybird "factory" in West London
had battalions of ladybirds, number
ing -at least' '500,000, ready -id ther
spring to fight the aphis which also,
attacks rambler roses, carnations
and other• plants. Two -spotted
Were' ere' most effective in
saving the gardeners' crops which'.
were being attacked by myriads of
"blight." They were particularly
useful *heir spraying was either
undesirable. or .unsuccessful.
Ladybirds:,were once flown 14,-
900 miles to save Hawaii's pine"
apples from a plague of reealybugs
Which threatened tis destroy them.
These little, red and black -spotted
insects have 'also been used •td re-
pel the Irjealybtlgts attacks oil cof-
fee plants. ht'Kenya.,
Wilen the $100,000,000 a year
orange growing industry in Cali-
fornia was threatened by cottony
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AN OFFER to every Inventor—LInt of la'
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rhe Ramsay Co.. Reglelered Parent Attar
neva. 278 Rank Street, Maws
PET HRSTON14011004 0 .Company, Por-
tant Snitchers Eotlbllohed 1000 860
ams Street. Turemo Rnnkin1 0, Intnrmt.
tlnn nn request
:SLEEP TO-NITE
SED1CIN tablets token according to
directions is a sale way to Induce steep
0r quiet the nerves when lens*; 51.00
Dru, Stores on! IorSedicin Toronto2.
Had Large Sores
On Leg and Foot --
Has Healed Nicely Thanks To
Moone's Emerald Oil
"Sly boy is 16 years old." writes hlrs. C,. C.
W„ Nashville, Tennessee. "Lost 3 weeks from
school—ion* were to palatal, Alter 4 rnonth,,
and trying most ererYthlog, we used h100NE'S
EMERALD 011. and alter a few applications
they healed rapidly. And now his leg has heeled
nicely, thanks to Emerald 011,"
Thousands of bottles arc sold every year to
r0U505 lust such ;OM of stubborn skin Itching'
Irritation and soreness. Stainless—greaseless
TIOONE'S SNARAi.Da OIL Is highly sourer
traced and a small bottle lasts a tong thee. At
drag stores eterytvliere..
Ingrown Toenu><ls
Nall Fla relieves pain instantly and
r0m0000 tngrovn portion of pall In ■
few anplieatlnne 61 65.
WART FIX
Guaranteed remedy no o,'1d Sate for
children. 760
CORN FIX
Romov,0 corns and -001105,0 In 10 min.
0010 Guaranteed Remedy. 15e. At your
0151/0101 00' 003, 00 111010 09 —
c. THOMPSON
/ ORCHARD CRESCENT
TORONTO t3, ONTARIO
LOGY, LISTLESS,
OUT,, ,OE LOVE
WITH LIFE?
Tam wake up your liver bile ...
lump out of bed ruin' to so
Life tot worth livor ? It' may. be Dia.hverl
It's a tact) If your liver bile ie not Bowing
freely Your: feudmay not digeot ... gee
bloats up you?etomntb'...'; you feoi core
gloated end n nil the fuandepiwklo go out
of 11fa. men, when you need rail0, gentle
Carters LOOP Liver PRI.. You see C'ertore
help atimulnte your liver bile UE Doc* again
It ie pouring out et a roto of up to two pinta a
day into your ingestive tract. Tide should
fix yen right up, make you feel that happy
time!y oto hero again. So don't stay, sank get
Cortes Little Liver Met Alwayslmvo them
on bond. Only 36o from any drupelet.
•
Bant YOU oW
k CICA ETt s
W1�Tl�ar,lt• r1
t
C/DARETTE TOBACCO