HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1953-9-9, Page 7t
CaLvert SPORTS CQLUMN
4 /moo
is
.orgot a chuckle the nailer day over a
y which said the new pin-up boy inIreland is a horse, and that "A Day
the Life of Tulyar" is the rage of the Suns
day supplements,
This, we think, could happen only 111
Ireland,
'nfittaai lovesIts horses, but breeds somemagicenniitmls, and i
owns one in the person of Tulyar.
For Tulyaris the nation's horse. A few months agog the
Irish Parliament, or Dail, approved the expenditure of $700,000
for the purchase of a stallion name Tulyar from the fabulous.
Indian sportsman, the Aga Khan; Tulyar is reputed to be the
horse of the century. He was undefeated as a 3 -year-old in
the British Isles, where a, racer has to run more than six fur
longs and with as much as+ 150 pounds len his back.
The purchase of Tulyar didn't pass the Dail without an
argument. After all, It happened in Ireland, The Conservative
meetb m
Fs of ,Parliaent contended .$700,000 was. a "luxury
price"jfpilian 'animal fit a' country facing an. economic crisis. -
But the more liberal members won their paint, 60 to 23, that
Tulyar was .a good investment In the national horse breeding
industry,
So Tulyar became a property et th government. He be-
longs to the Irish National Stud Farm in Tully, County
KIIdareieThe 'Ash are individualistic, if any race is, and they
see nothing inconsistent in nationalizing the noble horse.
Imagine the consternation on Ottawa's Parliament Hill if
some sporting member advocated the purchase of Native
Dancer for a million or so, for the purpose of improving the
breed Of racing animals in Canada. But, of course, race -horses
don't mean so much to Canada as they do to Ireland. In Ire-
land, the horse is big business. Export of horses is to Ireland'.
almost what General Motors is to the United States .or the.
gold, silver, lead • and zinc products to Canada, Tulyar, the
.people's horse, will bring many a pound into Ireland, Not so
many as the Irish sweep -stakes net, of course, but quite a
tidy sum, you may be sure,
An American syndicate headed by Jack Dempsey, Los
Angeles insurance man (not the, ex -pugilist) bid more than
a million for Tulyar. The Moslem Aga Khan may have felt
in conscience that the steed belonged to Ireland and took a
cut in price.
The Aga Khan was criticized in xondon for allowing Noor
to getaway from him. Hence he'was 'sensitive about. Tulyar.
Noor was Irish -bred, and beat Citation every time out. Tulyar
is held to be an Irish' horse, because be was trained ,on the
emerald green grass of the Ould Sod for his English victories.
Yteik 631rH1ie11it and suggestions for this column will be welcomed
by after Ferguson, c/o; .Calvert House, 431 Yonge St., Toronto.
C�,� rll ,
a I DISTILL•ERS LIMIT
AMHERSTWRG, ONTARIO LIMITED
..Plain Horse Sense..
by BOB ELLIS
Ten years ago the representa-
tives of 44 nations met in Hot
Springs, Va., U,S:A., to discuss
the human needs •for food and
bow they could be' balanced with
the production, of which modern
agriculture is capable, if the
hobbles are taken 'off it.
Ten years have passed since the
best experts of those 44 countries
have sat together and still more
than half of all mankind lays.
itself to sleep at night with an
empty stomach.
The same Problem.
The first conclusion the Hot
Springs conference arrived at
was that there is no need for
hunger anywhere in the world.
Two thirds of the people on
earth, they said, are food pro-
ducers and with the means that
science has given them, they
are capable of feeding themselves
and the remaining third.
There are no surpluses, they
said, There is a dearth of pur-
chasing power. The problem is
not production, the problem is
distribution. '
The delegates scored the policy
of some governments between.
wars of restricted production
which was necessitated by price
supports to prevent farmers in
Those countries to grow more of
the supported' crops ''which al-
ready were considered "surplus."
Capitol? Cdpitall—Helen Fiske
Smith, 19, will represent the 1.1,5,
capital at the "Miss America"
beauty contest in Atlantic City,
Tariff barriers and export sub-
sidies were' another device to
"protect" the producers.
The delegates also warned that,
unless a solution was found, re-
strictions, would again have to
be imposed and more drastic.
ones at that, as production would
continue to increase.
The Answer.
"But the world is sick of this
negative approach to the prob-
lem," the delegates continued in
fornung their answer.
"The development of the less -
advanced countries may be re-
garded as the major need of the
decades .following the war. In
an age of increasing agricultural
efficiency and industrial mass
production, it is a little less than
suicidal to leave two-thirds of
the world's people in a state of
chronic poverty and undernour-
ishment, Here lies the greatest
opportunity not only for improv-
ing human welfare but for ex-
panding the demand for agricul-
tural and industrial products.
Unless the opportunity is vig-
orously developed, through FAO
and other international organiz-
ations, industry and agriculture
will have to continue throttling
production down to a restricted
demand, which is like hobbling a
finely bred 'race horse and ex-
pecting it to win the race."
The conference was of the
opinion that "No government in
,isolation could provide remedies
for such a situation" ai that in
which so many countries found
themselves during the.inter-war
period; indeed isolated ' action
worsens the diflleultles,"
International 'Co-operation,
The delegates fif •the 44 gov-
ernments' came to the ultimate
conclusion that only by working
together the nation* could al-
leviate want and poverty: "The
high levels
of production
and
The
t..
co-ordinated international plan-
ning attained eor tee purppses.of
war /false strengthened' the con-
viction that as, match bud more
can be done for peace,"
Out of the Hot, Springs con-
ference came the Federation of
Agricultural Organizations
1, (FAO)' for the purpose of blue-
printing a plan.
The question today, ten years
later, is what have the member
governments done to put it to
work?
This column •welcomes,.sug-
gestions, wise or foolish, and all
criticism, whether.. constructive
or destructive and will try to
answer any. question. ' Address
your letters to Bob Ellis, Hoe 1,
123 18Th Street, New Toronto,
Ont. 9
Easy Does It, Fellowsi—Umpire Glen Roberts has his hands full
at Ebbetts Field as Chicago Cubs catcher Clyde McCullough moves
toward Dodger coach Billy Herman (being held by koberts) dur-
ing a third inning argument. The argument began when Brook-
lyn's Pee Wee Reese .was permitted to take only one extra base,
instead of two, on a bad throw by Cubs' Bubba Church.
Vim i
y ,A StixelT C
Hockej,' - Baseball e, Football -
Horseraoing,; Without getting out
the slide -rule and calipers, we
would say that these four pas
times, eccupy:,from 80, t0 ;90% of
the space devoted to sport in the
average newspaper.
m *
And yet not Brie Of'the four is
the sport that's played by more
people, than any other. Thirtty
years,, go -yes, twenty, years ago
—soccer occupied ' the Number
One slot. But nowadays it's Bas-
ketball leading the field, with the
rest trailing.
All of which comes to mind
because of the news that the
fametus Harlem Globe Trotters
are lust back on this side of the
Atlantis>after a seventeen -count-
ry, three;:continent tour which
grossed over • a million dollars.
During Coronation • .the colored
boys packed Wembley Stadium
in London, England. Some eight
weeks later they were perform-
ing before' a sell-out crowd in
Cairo,before a cheering mob of
be-fezzed Egyptians. Those lads
certainly do get around, and no
fooling.
Y m
Nobody can do more with the
thirty -inch "round bag of wind"
than the Harlem Globetrotters.
Nobody can sink fancier baskets.
Nobody can spring more laughs
out of a game that is supposed
to be Strictly` dribble, pass, ' and
shoot„And:.nobody=not even the
perennial, champion Yankees of
baseball,, nor Notre Dame's gold-
en
olden boys Of football -can rate with
the Trotters as a year-round box-
office bonanza:
Y * *
.As a fabulous sports attraction
unmatched anywhere, the Globe-
trotters -can be limited on only
one count: their games sev-
enty per cent competition, thirty
per cent vaudeville. Yet none
but a sports purist can avoid be-
ing converted—because, after all,
this show is a hundred per cent
talent. Whether involved in
straightforward b ask e t b a 1 I,
astounding ' acrobatics, or side-
splitting comedy, the Trotters al-
ways operate on a genius level of
imagination and evecution,
* *
Ever see them stagger the op;
position with a series of -blind
passes? Ever see them drop-kick
the ball into the basket? Ever
see them switch to a baseball -
game ,,,pantomime, right . in I the •
middle of a basketball rally;;
Ever see them slyly" smilgele a
round loaf of pumpernickel' bread
into the game, then bring down .
the house by taking angry bites
out of the "ball"? A hundred
million people all over the, world
have seen these stunts in the past
quarter century.
,, a
How did it all start? Credit a
five -foot -three maestro named
Abe Saperstein. This British -born
Barnum of basketball attended
high school in Chicago. 'After-
ward, he organized a neighbor-
hood team called the Savoy Big
Five. They were sponsored by a
ballroone in Chicago's Negro see-
thes. Impressed be their skill and
showmanship, Saperstein decided
to take them barnstorming,
* i m
Abe renamed his learn the Har-
lem Globetrotters, to indicate (0)
they were colored and (b) they
were willing to travel. In their
initial season of 1927, the Trot -
tore toured the East in a broken-
down bus. Some nights they
earned as little as five dollars'
when the hat was passed around
after a game. But today the Har-
lem Globetroters are a multimil-
lion -dollar- enterprise, drawing
'over $1,000,000 in salaries. Their
business headquarters occupy an
eleven -room suite in Chicago,
three rooms in New York, and
similar space in their Pacific
Coast and Paris branch offices.
m m
*
In his time, Saperstein has
been stone broke with his team
in Lonesome Woman Gulch,
British Columbia, But the pint-
sized promoter and coach has
also, with his team, been blessed
by the Pope at the Vatican in
Rome.
e + * *
The Trotters have drawn an
audience of 31,648 in the Rose
Bowl, 50,041 at Rio de Janeiro,
40,000 in three days in Paris. In
all countries, in all Ianguages,
spectators hail Goose Tatum and
his Herculean handsMarques
Haynes and his electrifying drib-
bling, and all the other stars of
the Harlem Globetrotting troupe.
* * 5
No small measure of basket-
ball's rating as the world's num-
ber -one sport can be credited to
the Globetrotters. They have
spread the gospel of the game to
the far reaches Of the globe...
to the Metalatkah Indians on An-
nete Island off Alaska, and to the
laborers in the sugar -cane fields
of Luzon in the Philippines. They
have played in the rain in Lyons,
France; in the blazing sun on
the beach at Casablanca, North
Africa; and in a barn loft of a
Nebraska hamlet.
* *
They've done a great job of
selling this Canadian -inspired
game to the world; and they've
also done a whole lot towards
breaking down obnoxious color -
lines in many places,
HER WOItIbY
Two elderly ladies checked in-
to a sporty new hotel in Miami
Beach. The :first thing they no-
ticed was a furtive little man
circulating from guest to guest in
the lobby, whispering and collect-
'ing money. They were told he
,was a bookie—a man who took
bets on the horses.
In vacation abandon, they de-
cided impulsively to risk two
dollars themselves. They "lost.
That night one of the ladies tos-
sed around in her bed and sigh-
ed so lugubriously that the other
counseled her, "Becky, you
shouldn't cry so over spilled
milk,
Stop worrying because
you lost. It was only two dol-
lars." "It ain't losing I'm wor-
rying about," Becky answered.
"I was worrying about if we had
won, What would we have done
with the horse?"
IT MAY BE
YOUR LIVER
If life'a not worth living
it may be your liver:
It's a feet] It tnkee Up to two pinta of liver
- Wen day to keep your digestive tract ht top
dmpol If your [fact bile is not Bowing freely
++. ydifr food may nos digest , .. gar Meals up
your stomach , .. you feel conntipntnd and
lea the fun and sparkle go out of We. Thai',
when you need mild gentle,aertor'e Little
Liver Pill,. Thcee (rations vegetable pills
help stimulate the dew of liver b1o, Soon
your tllgoatfon Oaths atnotl5ninil praporly
end you feel that happy doyn are .ori again!
Don't ever etav such Alatrya keep Carter's
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CbostUy Cavalier CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
Haunts Country
The War ofltee has promised to
help us and we shall be spice
with Army pastes when we carry
out ouz' investigations."
Thus said Mr, Bernard Payne,
an official of Birmingham Psy-
chic Research Society, These in-
vestigations concern apparitions
which reproduce in the air the
battle of Edgehill fought between
King Charles I and Parliament
in 2642. Inhabitants of Kineton,
Warwickshire, affirm that a
,ghostly cavalier c a l l s d the
"Phantom of Red - Horse Vale"
still rides about the neighbour-
hood.
One wonders if Mr. Payne and
his associates have read a pam-
phlet published 300 years ago
which gives a detailed account
of the apparitions. They appear-
ed first to some shepherds and
other countrymen, at between
twelve and one in the morning
about two months after the bat-
tle. At first they heard the rattle
of drums; then suddenly there
appeared in the air two armies
which joined in fierce combat,
The fighting went on till three
in the morning,
The shepherds made all haste.
to Kineton, where they knocked
up Mr. Wood, a justice of peace.
He aroused his 'neighbour Mr,
Marshall, a minister, and next..
night the two men headed a
posse of inhabitants and went
to the battlefield.
On that night and on several
occasions thereafter, the martial
phenomena were repeated.
All this came to the knowledge
of the King, who dispatched to
Kineton three of his officers —
Col. Kirke, Capt. Dudley and
Capt. Weinman — with the re-
sult that they, too, had the same
terrifying experience. They even
recognized personal friends in
the apparitions, such as Sir Ed-
mund Verney, who had been
slain in the conflict.
Bodies of some of the killed
Were interred in what afterwards
became Marlborough Farm Camp,
which explains to some extent
the interest taken today by the
War Of ice.
The World Could
End At Any Moment
Nowadays end of the world
prophets are seldom taken seri-
ously. Yet scientists say that the
world could end at any time with
no more than a .few moment's
notice.
They are convinced that the
universe is becoming increasing-
ly unstable. Lemaitre, the Belgian
scientist, has compared it to a
gigantic soap bubble, saying that
the universe is expanding more
and more every year, and one
day it will reach its limit.
So far as we can judge, the
earth is 2,000,000,000 years old.
All that time the thousands of
solar systems and galaxies have
been rushing farther and farther
away from each other.
The heavens may look calm
and peaceful, but in actual fact
everything is moving at terrific
speed. Some star systems travel
at the rate of 90,000,000 miles an •
hour. If they have all been doing
the same for two thousand mil-
lion years, The envelope of the
universe must be continually
stretching.
The more it stretches the thin-
ner its envelope must become.
One day, says Lemaitre, it will
reach splitting point, just as sure-
ly as any penny balloen. When it
does, in the twinkling of an eye,
the universe will end.
There are other ways in which
life on the earth might be ex-
tinguished, Astronomers f r e -
quently see two heavenly bodies
collide. Or there might be an-
other ice age. It should not be
assumed that such a change in.
temperature would be gradual.
It could happen in a split second.
Older Than Ewe
Prehistoric mammoths, dug up
in Siberia, have been fit to eat,
although dead for thousands of
years. They were killed by an ice
age which came down as fast as
a flash of lightning.
Just as possible could be a
submarine earthquake at a point
where thecrust o
f the sea-bed is
thin. The sea, pouring' into the
incandescent centre of the earth,
would split it open in a moment.
The Krakatoa explosion, when a
whole island disintegrated, prov-
ed how swiftly this could happen,
Quite suddenly and without
any warning a star will flare up
with ten times its usual brilliance,
and then die out swiftly. From
that moment it is a dead mass.
If our sun should do that, and
there is no reason to suppose it
is any different from thousands
of other suns, the human race
would end very swiftly.
Such accidents could happen
to the world — in theory, But
don't be alarmed— scientific
theories have a way of changing,
and, after all, the world has gone
on quite nicely for millions and
millions of years'
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IllFONG AND' ()LEANING
HAVE you anything neods'dyeing or clean.
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701 Ynnge St.. Toronto,
s
PAIR SALE
CRESS WART REMOVER Leaves no
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heavy in pig, from Registered Yorkshire
Young breeding stook available, Fax
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HACKNEYS, brood mares, etaRlons and
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GOOD selection farm properties, Kemot,
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WHEEL Chairs, Invalid walkers, folding
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SCHOOL BUSSES
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Special -1951 Mercury panel — 10 school
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Brand new tints, 825x20, 10p1y, heavy
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Ball Bearings. Rune on 60 cycle, 512,50.
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V. Belts. Ted Enethem, . Grand Valley,
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1047 DODGE School Due, 42 pasenger.
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DAWBDL Beg: No, 1 Seed, Cornell 596
Reg, No. 1 12.50 per bus„ Car0e11 000 Com-
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FOR September planting, new 'Senator
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Bent Pest Free on Reeelpt 01 Prim..
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Toronto
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PATENTS
AN OFFER to every inventor -Clot of m-
*80610ne and full Information sent free.
The Ramsay Co., Registered .Patent Attar
0eya 278 Bank Street, Ottawa,
PETBERSTONRATIGB a Company.
Patent Attorney.. Estahllobed 1800, 850
Bay Street. Tnr0nt7. Patents, all 0nuntrl0., -
PERSONAL
11.00 TRIAL offer Twenty -Ove deluxe
personal equiremente, Latest Catalogue
tnoluded. The Medico Agency. Sox 114.
Terminal A, Toronto. Ontario.
TOBACCO ELIMINATOR
A scientific remedy for cigarette addic-
tion, For free booklet, write C. W. King
Pharmacal Corporation Ltd., Box 808,
„ Walkervillo, Ont.
WANTED
CIDER press and cutter, small or medtnm
eine. H. J, Webb, Dundee Highway,
isiington.
WANTED to purehnee—Pullets 11 Agee
and breeds. Apply Box No, 105. 128
Eighteenth Street, Now Toronto,
WANTED — Flocks to aurally Canadian
Approved Hatchery with h tohln8 eggs
for 1953-54 sen0on, Anply Box NO, 104.
123 Eighteenth Street. New Toronto.
ISSUE 37 — 1953
if 11
Get quick relief for
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SORE MUSCLES ?
1.51
INAR IES
WRING OF PAIN"
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