HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1953-11-25, Page 3THECatVert SPORTS COLUMN
Es/7A''rV
8t We haven't any idea when the Hoe -
key Hall of 'Fame a Kingston will be-
come something more tangible than a
vague dream of the future. We believe,
though, that the game today is big ,
enough, and Its background sufficiently
rich in episode, history and memento for
esta"tl'li.>lim nt T.' :i Hall that will rival. in a measure, the
baseball shrine at Cooperstown, N. Y.
In Mp• ntreal there is a collection of hockey sticks, with
which the original owners performed record feats, and which
will be a fine item for the Hall,. And the richest addition to
this unusual assortment was made not long since when a ,
collector of hockey trivia donated to the group the stick that
the hockey -immortal Howie Morenz carried that night of
January 28, 1937, when the Stratford Streak caromed off
Big Earl Siebert, crashed heavily, skates -first, into the wooden.
border just above the ice at the South end of the Montreal
Forum. and broke his leg, Two months later Howie died,
They said his heart had failed him. More likely his heart
was broken as he realized he might never play his beloved
game again,
Probably the Morenz stick is the lightest in weight, of all
the sticks in the Montreal Forum collection. Naturally, it
has dried out considerably in the 15 years since it fell from
Howie's hands, but it Was carefully shellacked as a preserva-
tive measure. Morenz always used a very light stick. Some
players believe they get more control and more speed of shot
with a heavyweight club, but Morenz never thought so:
Howie used what is known as a No. 3, stick so that it is carried
at a distance from the body.The angle of the blade to the
handle makes that difference.
There is just one autograph on the stick. Suitably enough
It was inscribed by Howie's great partner over a long span
of years, Aural Joliet.
The stick goes to join a notable collection • ef• war -clubs
and they will, in the course of time, go into the Hickey Hall
of Fame. We imagine the biggest club in the lot is .that which
belonged to Nels Stewart. when the great scorer *played ° his
final games with New York Americans. Stewart favored
the heaviest stick he could get.
Another big club is that with which Cannonading Charlie
Conacher scored almost the last of his 225 goals. The sticks
with which Gordie Howe, Teddy Lindsay, Elmer Lach, Porky
Dumart, and 'Milt Schmidt scored their 200th goals are there.
Rocket Richard has two sticks in the display, one with which
he scored goal No. 200, another with which he notched the
counter that broke Nels Stewart's life -time record of 324
NHL goals,
And there's a touch of near -tragedy among the sticks. For
hanging there Is the club Ace Bailey carried that night of
December -12, 1933, when he was crashed face -downward by
Eddie Shore. fractured his skull, hovered between life and
death many days and nights and finally recovered.
Your comments and suggestions for this column will he welcomed
by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calved House, 431 Yonge St, Toronto,
Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED
AMHERSTEURO, ONTARIO •
PLAIN HORSE SENSE'..
By ;BOB ELLIS
In the dispute between the
gold miners and the mine
operators, neither the arguments
of the union for,. in i' . the' lii'gii-
ments of management against,
union security are inipr'e§Bide,%
A Horse Smiles
Union leaders say that they
need :the `"cheekoff'l or "main-
tenance of membership" to fin-
ance union, activities. This. in
Itself is a good `reason and has
been recognized as s u c h,
amongst others by Mr. Justice
Rand;; but:no evidence has been
adduced yet that it is a right,
except l'the 'precedent of six
provinces where it has been put
on the Statutes.
On the Other side of the fence
some of the big operators have
solemnly declared their concern
Jor the freedom Of their em-
ployees which they see 'threat-
ened by the "union bosses." An
argument which perhaps could
draw a smile from a horse.
So tar, so good. Here are the
two industrial giants at a tug
of war and the rest of the peo
ple are looking on trying to
pick the winner.
Democratic: Rights
However, when labour lead-.
ers are claiming union security
as a "democratic" right and the
Honourable Minister of Labour
says that it is "a good pnint for
collective bargaining" • a n d
should not be made compulsory
in law, the question immediate-
ly becomes one 'of general in-
terest as it may prejudice. and
jeopardize the rights of others:
To denote the right of asso-
ciation as "democratic" is not
only false, it is outright clan-
, ger'oue-
"Denhocratic" is a political
word With the connotation of
government, Therefore a,.demo-
cratic right could be construed
as a right by the government,
which pould be taken away
again bj' the government. The
right of ,association, and all
rights deriving from it, aro much
more than political.
IT MAY BE
YOUR LIVER
if IiFo's not'.wiifth runt ge,:'19,:,
it may hoyottriiverl'
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Hooper If your liver bile to not flowing frailly
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Natural Rights
The right of a man to form
associations for his spiritual and
materiel development is . from
Nature, not from the State,
which, indeed is, itself based on
it.
Man was created free and en-.
dewed with intelligence and
free will. He was before the
State was, which he organized
-for his own benefit better to
protect his own rights.
It is the duty of the State to
protect the natural rights of its
members. It may define and
o'egulate them, but it can neither
add to them nor detract from
them.
Eternal Law
These rights are based on the
universal law of injustice, de-
fined over 2,000 years by the
last great Roman philosopher as
i1 a true law, a right reason,
conformable to nature, univer-
sal, unchangeable, eternal,
whose command urge us to duty,
and whose prohibitions restrain.
us from evil. ; .. This law can-
not be contradicted by any
other law, and is not liable
either to derogation or abro-
gation ..-. in all times and na-
tions ,this universal law must
forever reign, eternal and im-
perishable. It is the sovereign
master and emperor of all be-
ings. 'God himself is its author,
its promulgator, its enforcer."
Natural Justice
If the unions are arguing for
union security as a political
tight+. they . are arguing on the
wrong plane.
It ,
,it a natural right, and it
it rls' such that society, lin its
Ov n: interest, must* safeguard it.
. The Minister of 'Labour again
is far off the track of "right
reasgn" when he says ,that union
Seeurjty, Is ;'e • geed point for
collective bargaining,"
1 Its form might 'be a point for
bargaining, subject to the needs
Of each and every individual
ease. But the principle is an
absolute and should be written
into positive la'w,
In Natural Justice Canadians
ere free to form associations,
whether it is to play Bingo or
to negotiate the price . of milk
or to bargain for wages.
They look to their detnoerati-
Bally elected government • for
protection of their rights.
This column weIcOmee sug-
gestions,
gestions, wise or foolish, and >l
criticism, whether constructive
or destructive and will try to
answer tiny question. Address
your letters to Bob Ellis, Box 1,
123. 18th Street, New Toronto,
Ont.
"rly'ink" Airt►und
In A Silent 1' l'.i1dl`'.
Otte 'morning int dune/11943, :Il,
went to the railway, station at,.
Bendel 'an the FrenTin •lliyieril .r:
and received a woeilen cafe ex-
pressed !rem Piuis. In it was "a"
new and promising device; the
'result of years .Of struggle and'
dreams,, ',an gutnmatio compress -,1,,
ed -air diving lung conceived by
Emile Gapnan and :myself. I
rushed it to "Villa Barry where
my diving' comrades, ' •Philippe
Taillie;c °arid- Frederic PumaS .'
waited: Nix 'children ever : ripened,
a Christmas ,present ,w}th„ more:,
excitement than ours when we
unpacked the first' "aqua -lung."'
If it tethered, diwing could be re+ ,
volut"loklized. •n 1 .
We found :an assembly of three,
moderate-sized cylinders of ccen.;,,
pressed, 017 ,, linked . to, an sic
regulator 'the' size of an alarm
clock. Froin the' regulator there
extended two tubes, joining on a
mouthpiece. With this equip-
ment harnessed to the back, a
watertight glass mask over the
eyes and nose, and rubber foot
fins, we intended to make un-
encumbered flights in the depths
of the sea.
We hurried to a sheltered cove
which would conceal our activity
from curious bathers . .
I looked into the sea with the
sattT11 sense of trepass that I have
felt on every dive. A modest
canyon opened below, full of
dark green weeds, black sea ur-
chins and s m a 11 flowerlike
white algae. Fingerlings brow-
sed in the scene, The sand
sloped down into a clear blue
infinity. The sun struck so
brightly I had to squint. My
arms hanging at my side, I kick-
ed the fins languidly and travel-
ed down,., gaining speed, watch-
ing the beach reeling past. I
stopped kicking and the momen-
tum carried me' on a fabulous
glide. When I stepped,..d slowly
emptied my lungs and held my
breath. The diminished volume
of my body decreased the lifting.
force of water, and, I sank dream-
ily down. I inhaled a great•
chestful and retained it. _ I rose
toward the surface.
My human lungs had a new
role to play, that of a sensitive
ballasting system . .
I reached the bottom in a state
of transport. A school of silvery
sars (goat bream), round and
flat as saucers, swam in a rocky
chaos. I looked up and saw the
surface shining like a defective
mirror, In the centre of the
looking glass was the trim sil-
houette of Simone, reduced to a
doll. I waved. The doll waved
atme...
I experimented with all pos-
sible maneuvers of the aqualung
—loops, somersaults and barrel
rolls. I stood upside down on
one finger and burst out laugh-
ing, a shrill distorted laugh.
'Nothing I did altered the auto-
matic rhythm of air. Delivered
from gravity and buoyancy I
flew around in space.—From
"The Silent World," by Captain
T. 'Y. Cousteau, with Frederic
Dumas.
How Animals Sleep
Through The
Winter
How seriously- the many or-
dinary functions of animals'
bodies are slowed down during
hibernation was once shown in
a striking way by a zoo tortoise.
On arrival at the zoo it, started
its six month's sleep. Then it
woke up and died..
Doctors found that the cause
of death was straw which the
tortoise had eaten on its way
to the zoo. The internal organs
had made no attempt to digest
that straw during hibernation.
But as soon as the animal awoke
the body began to function and
the effort to digest the straw
proved fatal.
Hibernation is often described
as "winter sleep," but in true
sleep •our organs continue to
function in much the same way
as they do when we are awake.
Our breathing goes on, and our
cirdulation and digestion, even
though they Slowdown a trifle,
continue their work.
In hibernation breathing' and
circulation are reduced to a rate
which can be best described as
"just ticking over," while di-
gestion in most hibernating ail=
mals does no work at all,
Apart from greatly increased
warmth, ordinary stimulation,
like touching or scratching, or
even pinching, will not awake a
hibernating creature,
Why do animals hibernate?
There does not seem to be just
one common cense.
The generally held notion is
that at a definite time each year
certain animals just select suit-
able spots, curl themselves up,
and remain unconscious until
the following Spring.
Observation does not support
this at all, Hibernating maim
mals wake and stir occasionally
during the winter, and these In-
terruptions do not alWays coin-
cide with warm weather,
it
High Tee — Champion golfer, Patty erg keeps her swlneing arm
in shape during an early morning practice session on the roof
of a New York City hotel.
Of all the characters overblown
with a sense of their own im-
portance—and there are plenty
of them In this world—it has
always seemed to us that sports
moguls are about the most in-
flated. Slather the' praise on
the sport from which they make
their livings as thick as you
please, and they take it as no
more than right and proper. But
stick in a word. or so of criticism,
and they howl like so many stuck
pigs r r r
A recent instance of this was
seen when, after the court ease
in Barrie where a hockey player
was charged with manslaughter,
the judge had a few pointed
things to say about unnecessary
roughness. From the reaction of
the moguls, notably Clarence
Campbell and Conn Smythe, you
Might have thought that His
Honor was attacking the British
Flag or the Christian religion.
"What—hockey too rough? Ridi-
culous! It's unheard of! How
ignorant can people get" was the
general tone of their remarks.
s r *
• In the November 16 issue of
the Toronto Globe 8c Mail,
Canada's' best-known and most -
admired columnist had something
to say along this line;
Several months ago when we
wrote about rough hockey we
received a Letter of rebuke
from Mr. Clarence .Campbell,
president of the NHL and .na-
tural mouthpiece for hockey.
He said that what we had writ-
ten was probably libelous
though as a lawyer he ought
to have known better. We
were not speaking as an ob-
server for we have not seen a
hockey match in twenty years,
but as the result of reading'
stories by hockey writers. They
have all at different times
spoken against rough hockey.
Note . Mr. , Justice .,Wells . has
powerfiilly reinforced what We
have all been saying. He was
presiding at a trial for man-
slaughter of one young player
who had crashed another play -
et into the boards, inflicting
fatal injuries. This offense
is known as "boarding" and
carries a minor penalty. Is it
to be considered deserving of
only a minor penalty when
one player is killed as a result
of it? There is enough vio-
lence in the -world without
sports and games adding to it.
* r r
To point up McAree's criti-
cism, that same issue of the
Globe and Mail carried the news
that on the previous Saturday
night, two Boston players, in a
game with the Maple Leafs, had
suffered leg fractures and
would probably be lost to their
club for most of the season!
e o r
The truth of the matter is that
hockey, in spite of whet the high
brass claims, HAS 'got a whole lot
rougher this past ten years or
so. Believing, rightly or wrong-
ly, that the cash customers were
lured by 'the slam-bang type of
game in which high -sticking,
boarding and rink -corner free -
for -alis are a feature, coaches
and managers have been look-
ing for players who can both
"take it" and "dish it out "ra-
ther thah those who can stick-
handle, dodge and pass,
✓ r w
Naturally, . what the big guya
feature the little feliews copy,
the big trouble being they are less
skilful at it, with the result that
Royal Touch — King Paul of
Greece, visiting the farm of
George Smith near Oswego, 111,
stops to pet a farm -yard kitten.
His Queen, Frederik*, had been
confined to bed in Chicago with
a cold.
nowadays games of junior, ama-
teur—so-called—hockey too often
bear greater resemblance to an
old-fashioned Donnybrook than
they do to "the fastest game on
earth."
* * r
Now, there are signs that those
who sowed the wind are liable
to start reaping the whirlwind,
In Britain, where hockey was
"big-time" for several years, it
is definitely on its way out. In
the States — well, what with the
Television opposition and lack
of interest in several places,
anything can happen. To us,
personally, hockey is too good a
game to be ruined in an effort
to please_a lot of loud-mouths—
male and female—whose rally-
ing -cry is "Get him" and who
wouldn't recognize skill or clever
play if they found it in their
soup. "There are more people kill-
ed in baseball than in hockey" is
the word of one distinguished
apologist, which is just as sensi-
ble as the radio comedian's old
gag about black horses eating
more than white horses. La-
crosse—.a much better game than
hockey and, at one time a much
more popular one — practically
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faded out of the picture largely
because of too much roughness.
The same .thing can happen to
hockey—and, chances are, will
happen, unless those who stand
to lose the most if it should
get busy and do a`spot or two of
house-cleaning.
e k r
And, as we have remarked be-
fore, one of the smartest things
they could do would be to limit
the length of the sticks—make
it six inches or less than it is
at present. The chief cause of
present-day roughness and braw-
ling is illegal hooking. With
shorter sticks the boys would be
forced to play the puck, instead
of the man, Which is as it
should be!
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HELEN'S BEAUTY SCHOOL
LEARN HAIRDRESSING IN 5 MONTHS
UNDER EXPERT SUPERVISION
719 Yonge St.
TORONTO
PATFNR!B
AN OFFER. to -every inventor—Ligt of 1n•
ventlone and full tdtormat0on"cont tree.
The Ramsay CO... Regletered Ratent Attar -
neva. 278 Bank Street, Ottawa.
FETR1ORSTONHAUGHk Company Patent
Attorneys, E7tabllahbd 1290. (09 Tom.
verelty Ave., Toronto, Patent,' all oountrleo.
PERSONAE.
.BOLLYWOODI Lettere remedied 250.
P0810076., Selection Views, Stare, -8 tot
$1:00,' Remaiied Free, .101, Opportunitles
$1, Air Mall, Gillies, 0504 Fountain,
Hollywood 28, California; -
51.00' TRIAL otter.` Twenty -flys- deluxe
portional requirements Latest Catalogue
included. The Medico Agency.' lana 124
Terminal A Toronto. Ontario.
.
TOBACCO ELIMINATOR
A ,clenttnc remedy tor' cigarette alike
tion. For tree booklet, write C. W. King
Pharmacal Corporation Ltd., Sex 8000,
WarkervIIle. Ont,
UNWANTED HAIR
Vanished nw0' with SACA-PELO,
remarkable diernvery of the age, Free
Information at LSr-Bear Laboratories
e Ltd„ Ste. 6, 079 Granville St„ or write
P 0. Box 99, Vancouver. 11.0.
STAMPS
FREE Trinidad and Tobago 240. Bar-
gain approvals. Jaen 00.6. 4410 8t.
Catherine Weat. Montreal.
WANTED
10005 WANTED — We pay hlghe,77
Prices for ungraded eggs. Premium for
white eggs. Write for partl0ularo.
Thornbank Poultry Forms, 851 Onalnsion
Avenel Toronto.
Stan In Mara lime at home. Everyone
heads, church and clubrcirculars advertising.
Hundreds of lobs quick) d easily done
with a world-tamous ADANA prase—uses
indtaard printer's type. Follow simple (nsrruc-
lons—produce professional work. Write for free
literature and samples.
ADANA PRINTING EQUIPMENT
S6 Adelaide 51. East, Toronlo
IT
RELIEVED
IN A JIFFY
or money back
Very first use of soothing, cooling, liquid
D.D.D. Prescription positively relieves raw
'ed hell—caused by eczema, rushee,. scalp
rrltation, citation—other lull troubles. Greaae-
eae, stainless. 43c triol bottle must satisfy or
moneyb P'. Ask your druggist for D.D.D.
PRESC
ISSUE 48 — 1953
ROLL YOUR OWN
BUM CIGARETTES
WITH