HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1954-2-17, Page 5THEeaNert SPORTS COLUMN
6 Sewn Trot
r Iflstory repeated itself as Muzz Patrick,
younger of Lester Patrick's. two big sons,
recently took over as coach of the New
York hangers, lee thus becomes a rival
of,his brother Lynn, former playing star
of Rangers, now coach of Roston Bruins.
History enters into this brother -rivalry
because it happened before. Lester Patrick, the colorful White
Eagle, was coach of New York Rangers almost from the be-
ginning of that colorful club's career, For one Or two seasons,
Frank Patrick, brother of Lester, was coach Of Roston Bruins,
later of Montreal Maroons, so these two brothers were rivals,
too,
sagThe hockey family
n Ca Canada, written
indelible
abroad. ed chapters
the
Frank engineered one of the most daring promotions in the
entire history of sport on this continent when, nearly 50 years
ago, after both had starred brilliantly in eastern hockey, they
invaded the west coast, set up a series of artificial ice -rinks
in Vancouver, Victoria and New Westminster, scoured the east
for playing talent, and formed the Pacific Coast League,
sathe
teinternational body
In
arhockey,longbetoreeasrn Ut itedStates cities became part
and parcel of the National League, As far back as 1914, ten
years before a United States city entered the National League
Portland, Oregon, had a team In the PatrIcks' West Coast
organization, followed the next season by the entry of Seattle.
Not only did the Patricks conduct the League, with Frank
as President, but both played regularly in the bitterly -fought
games that marked the hockey of that era. So dangerous to
eastern hockey did the Patricks become — they appropriated
Toronto's Stanley Cup champions of 1914 intact and took them
to the Coast -- that the eastern moguls declared war. But the
Patricks wen the skirmish, and for a time, believe it or not,
their Pacific Coast League had drafting rights from the east,
When their western league petered out, the Patricks sold
out their stars to the east, and Lester became manager of
Rangers, a position he held until 1946, a 20 -year span.
Meantime, bis two sons, Lynn. and Muzz, had starred for
Rangers. Lynn later became coach for a time, then moved
'to Boston to take over there, with signal success. Now brother •
Muzz comes east from the Pacific Coast Tacoma team, follow-,
big a familiar Patrick trail, so the Patrick rivalry blitzes once
again.
Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed
by Elmer Ferguson, e/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St•, Toronto.
Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED
AMHERSTOURG, ONTARIO
Wife Is The Prize
in This Horse -Race
To wina Kulmuk girl as bride
in Central Asia yeti must ,catch
her on horseback in a terrific
contest with rival stilton. If she
doesn't favour you slie will elaah
you aeloss the face with her
whip.
On a visit to the Kale:mks of
the Heavenly Mountains, Col. P.
T. Petherton saw one of these
thrilling love -chases. A space
about half 'a mile square • had
been cleared, The • belle of the
camp wore a richly ernbreidered
cloak fastened by, a -gold sash,
baggy trousers of white 9111
tucked into' embFoidereti top
boots, a pork -pie hat studded
with turquoiaes, bracelets of •
rubies, a turquoise necklace, ;`,
Radiantly happy, she carne on
to the ground accompanie6t iby
her parent's, smiled end bowed
' to the cheering crowds, , Ten
rival suitors lined up behind her,
each on a restive mount, With
a wave of the hand she swung
into the saddle of her superb.
charger, glancing with'' a drearny
expression of love at one stal-
wart
tatwart young Iaimuk, one of the
starters, who was obviously ,the
favourite.
Then the chase was on.' Away
went the girl, with', the suitors
in full cry, riding flat out. Sud-
denly she pulled up. The others,
taken by surprise, thundered
past in a mad gallop, .swung
31. round, converged on her. In and
out among them she darted, so
that none could catch her by the•
waist, The crowd's enthusiasm
was .terrific, "I myself , was
quite carried away by the amaz-
ing scene; it was a joy to'watch
the horsenianslii-Ir'and ;tliei11s1"
Col. Etherton says in a --vivid
travel book, "On .Either. Side of
the Equator'',
One of the young 'hopefuls
carie gtiit'e class ti her. They
wereriding side by side in a
breakneck gallop. The thunder
ofhoofs and, roar of the crowd
shook the ground. Col'. ' Ether-
ton began to have ''doubts for
the favodrite, ieho"was 'away', on
the Offside,^ 'going -all; tout; wait
ing -for thea chance to . close in.
"Surely,",he, thought,PfAbe rival,
"he's going to get her!"
Then "came the climax. She
was riding 'Magnificently, up-
right, :with complete control of
her horse. Suddenly„rriding with
her _left hand, .she raised her
right with the rawhide whip and
with 'a tremendous backhander
slashed him across -the face. He
reined iii;- swayed,' looked like
collapsing. Then, realizing he
was finished, he rode slowly
away, having staked his all and
' lost.
Meantime, the girl ane the
other suitors had dodged and
finked, wheeling about. Slap-
dashthey went, up and down the
field, and when at last the right
man got inside place and ranged
alongside her she led him a rare
old chase.
.. PLAIN HORSE SENSE ..
By BOB ELLIS
Rome, Italy
We were flying in a Constel-
lation of Air Prance on the way
from Paris to Rome. The altitude
was 19,000 feet and deep down
below us was a thick blanket of
Woolly clouds.
Suddenly a chunk of rock' broke
through the clouds and 'another
and another. We were right over
the Alps and they were creeping
up closer and closer until you
could see the tracks of game in
the snow or thought that you
could see them.
When we passed over the Mont
Blanc, with 16,000 feet Europe's
highest mountain, one wondered
for a moment whether we would
be able to keep clear of it, But
there were still a safe 3,000 feet
between the plane and the icy
peak.
Romans, Goths and 'Americans
To do in Rome as the Romans
do one has to have 6 to 8 cafe
espresso per day which are sup:
posed to be as black as the night,
as hot as hell and as sweet as
love. They are black and sweet
all right, but we have not come
across a hot one yet.
Twenty five centuries are piled
up here one over the otther. You
pass the ruins of the Coliseum
five times as large as the Tor-
onto Stadium, where the first
Christians were martyred. and
you come to a row of ultra mod.
ern office buildings with flush
toilets and automatic elevators,
where 1,000 people of 15 differ.
ent nationalities work for FAO,
Food and Agriculture Organiza-
tions of the United Nations.
You turn around the atrocity
called monumento Vittore Em-
manuele which looks like a tre-
mendous wedding cake with
sugar icing on top, and you stand
before a little underground pris-
on where St. Peter and St. Paul
were held before the one was
beheaded as became a Roman
citizen and the other crucified to
die like his Master,
The walk back to the city takes
you past the Palazzo Venezia
with the little balcony from
which Mussolini used to make his
speeches rousing the Romans of
his time. You come to the Scala
Santa, the holy steps which
Christ walked up to meet PIlate
and which were brought to Rome
by the Empress Helena from the
Holy Land,
You go on and ' cross the river
Tiber, past the Mausoleum of
Hadrian, the last stronghold. of
I/��1„ 1 ‘111$5 tViIr!rI14111 Nearly Cfazy
Very first use o1 soothing, rooting liquid
D. D, 1). Proscription positively tellevea
rau' red ltelt -caused by rattan, rashes,
nems irritation, chnbng—other Itch Iro'bbies.
Cremates, atainle s, 43e trial bottle must
urdgstrBIIy rugitoD.DD.PBSCRPTON
the Roman Empire against the
Ostgoths ,fifteen hundred years
ago, and after a short walk up a
new avenue you stand on a tre-
mendous round place facing the
largest church of the world —
St. Peter, large enough to hold
100,000 people, Man feels very
small indeed.
Government Trouble
Italy is trying to get itself a
new government. At the time
this is being written, signor Fan-
fani has just finished the big
speech in which he developed
his program and the debate has
started. Before this report,goes
in print the world will know
whether he has the confidence
of the House or had to Make
room for another man,
TheHouse is split roughly in
three groups, each made up of
several parties, In the center
are the Christian Democrats with
the Liberals and Democratid' So-
cialists; on 'the right the Mon-
archists and Neo -Fascists and on
the left the Communists and- the
Socialists under Nenni, who is
said to be redder than Togliatti,
the Communist leader and who
apparently intends to be the Tito
of Italy.
Much Needed Reforms
The questions of contention are
social welfare measures and ag-
ricultural reform. Fifty million
people live in a country as large
as the Maritimes. The soil is not
as productive as in France or the
Netherlands and ownership of
the land is concentrated in. the
hands of a small feudal class.
The rich are richer and the poor
are poorer here than in any
other country in Western Europe
with the exception perhaps of
Spain and Portugal.
How desperately poor they are,
may be seen from the consump-
tion of meat which in the South-
ern parts of Italy is less than five
pounds per person per year.
To keep Europe Non -Com-
munist, the Communists have to
be kept out of power in Italy.
Unless Fanfani, who stands On
the far left of the Christian Dem-
ocrats, or some other member of
his party comes up with a genu-
ine reform program, and has the
courage to really enact it with the
co -Operation of the Democratic
Socialists, the future looks dark
for Italy and Europe. •
This column welcomes sug-
gestions, wise or foolish, and all
criticism, whether constructive
or destructive and will try to
answer any question. Address.
.ur lath
1 3 letters
New Toronto, Ox ,
to,Ont
"LITTLE WILLIE"
Willie stopped a table car
While standing on the track.
It gnus his system quest a 'art
Has dstert now wear black.
Feeling Jumpy - Shapely Sandra Francis jumps from the deck
of a sturdy Ve-inch plastic toboggan during her visit to the 1 Oth
Annual Conference of the Society of Plastic Engineers in Toronto.
Everything — well, almost everything — in the picture is plastic,
from the toboggan and swimsuit to the snow. e
Finally, at the far enol of the
ground, she handed the whip to
him. The losers trotted away,
the winner with his bride rode
slowly down the centre while
the crowd cheered. Later the
marriage ceremony took place
and she went off to her new
home.
Ili Moslem Turkistan, Col.
Etherton came across an unusual
custoth — temporary marriage,
linking a newcomer to the town,.
to one woman for the period of
his stay, with divorce at the end
of it.
A man arrives in a town and
looks for a go-between to find
him a suitable, attractive wife,
whether he is staying fora year
Or"only. a "Week or two.' They
go before a mullah to be made
man and wife, • pend .-afterwards
for a small fee he writes out the
divorce. This enables the girl
to be an honest woman again
when the man leaves.y She takes
the document around with her
as her lines, not of marriage but
of future prosperity!
Thus, life for a pretty Turkis-
tan girl can be one long honey-
moon if she is of the pin-up
variety. Dowries, pearls, costly
presents could come her way.
She must, however, remain
faithful to the contract while it
lasts. If she is caught straying
she is placed on a donkey, face
to tail, with her features black-
ened all over, and led through •
the bazaars, pursued by insults
and flying garbage, preceded by
a town crier.
Some famous ,character once
cracked; "Whenever a new book
is published I go and `lead an
old one." 'Well, as is probably
no secret, that is similar to the
system we use in -writing these
articles, Whenever _we, are too
lazy ter dig up a new sports story,
we revive one. And that which
'follows is regard ng •one of the
unique' characters of ' Sport, , Al
Schacht, the- , Clown Prince of
Baseball.
* * *
This was back about 30 years
ago when Al, because of a sore
shoulder, had been demoted
from the Big Time to Reading,
in the International loop, He
could only pitch once in a while,
so spent most of his time in the -.
coaching b o x, needling the
enemy hurlers and thinking up
some of the goofy stunts which
later made him famous, It was
during this season, we believe,
that he devised his great golfing
act in which .he used a nickel
rocket baseball as the golf ball
and a shovel for a club.
* * *
Came a day when the Balti-
more Orioles were in Reading
for a doubleheader and Schacht
gloated over the grand oppor-
tunity to use his needle on the
hide of one of his bitterest
enemies, the great Rube Parn-
ham. Chief Bender, who ' both
managed and pitched for. Read-
ing, won a close One over Jake
Bentley in the opener; and When
Parnham was announced to, hurl
for Baltimore in the second
game, :Al was all set for the time
of his life.
Schacht's antics in the coach-
ing box got Penitent so hot and
bothered that Reading was Off to
an early lead; but as time went
by Rube settled down and Balti-
more gradually drew closer. At
-last Manager Bender sent Al to
the bull -pen to warm up and
when, in the top of the final
inning the Reading pitcher got
into a real jam, Schacht went in
to pitch with nobody out and the
bases loaded. "But," as Al always
told it, "any time I went in to
pitch there were always three on
base."
* * *
On his way in from the bull-
pen Al reached into his pocket
for a handkerchief and there he
found one of the nickel rocket
balls already referred to. So he
promptly stuck the regular ball
into his pocket and substituted
the phoney, first warning his
catcher, privately, to signal for
nothing but fast balls.
* * *
First Oriole to face Al was
Joe Boley who had been hav-
Ing a grand afternoon at bat. In
comes the fast one, Boley takes a
tremendous swing— but, instead
of heeding for the bleachers, the
"dead" ball floats through the
air' and settles _in the shortstop's
hands. One out!
* * *
The ball had been knocked
slightly out of shape by Boley's
swing but Al managed to twist
it into some kind of shape, and
faced the next Baltimore hitter.
Again bat and ball connect with
a resounding smeck, and this
time the ball drifts lazily into
the second baseman's glove; Two
out—bases still jammed --- and
the batter, Mr. Parnham,
*
'Walking over to 'his enemy
bchacht yells, 'to that half the
peeplo in the pasts can hear,
"Whatcha carrying that bat for,
lenge? You know It isn't any
good to you." Then, toeing the
rubber, he adds insult to injury
by tossing the ball plateward
underhanded.
Parnham stands there, really
waiting for thatcripple, and'
when he swings meets it right
on the trademark. Expecting
-the ball to go over the fence
Parnham starts on a mad dash
° around the bases -- and then, to
his utter astonishment, sees
Schacht dancing around in the
pitcher's • box,- waiting to make
the, catch,
This is too much for Parnham,
Rushing to Umpire McGowan he
shouts: "Make him show you
that ball!" Schacht has no time
to get the real horsehide out of
hfs'elocket, and has to hand the
•^phoney to the "(imps.'
* * .,
At first Schacht tried to con-
vince McGowan that it was the
same ball he found fn the box
when' he took over the pitching
duties. Then, ' he admitted that
the ball he pitched to Parnham
was a ringer, but insisted that
he had pitched a regulation ball
to the first two Baltimore bat-
ters. As there was, by now; no
chance of disproving the latter
statement, McGowan ruled that
Schacht must pitch again to
Parnham.
5 * *
Every time Schacht got set to
pitch, Parnham would back out
of the batter's box and demand
to have a look at the ball. The
crowd, naturally, gave Parnham
a terrific going-over, and
Schacht managed to work up the
count to two strikes and no balls.
5 e *
Then, when the odds are about
ten -to -one on the next pitch
being high or outside, Schacht
puts everything he has into it,
and it comes across, right
through the middle, Parnham
starts to swing, but he's too late.
He goes all the way around but
doesn't get even a piece of the
ball. Strike three! And the
game is over.. And to cap the
climax Al gets the ball from
the catcher, rolls it toward his
departing enemy and softly says,
Snow Queen — Suitably dressed
for the occasion, blonde Carol
Handy stands in the midst of her
White domain after being elect-
ed Snow Queen,
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"Want to see the ball again,
Rubor?"
*
This, quite understandably, is
too much for a man in Pare -
ham's state of mind^ Telling
Schacht what he thinks of him
in language we refrain front
printing for fear of setting the
presses ablaze, Parnham grabs
the ball, winds up and heaves
it clear out,of the park,
* 4t *
And as if he hadn't suffered
enough through being gypped
out of victory, poor Rube winds
up a hectic afternoon by having
the Umpire clap a $25 fine on
hind for an unsportsmanlike :dis-
play of temper. Thinking it over,
after the passage of a giiarter-
century or so, ive pre of the
opinion t h Parnham should
have received a medal for not
crowning Al Schacht with his
bat. But good!!
"LITTLE WILLIE"
Little Willie got et gun
And shot his aunty, just for fun;
Saying then, "I did it solely
To make deer Aunty still more holey,
FOR BALE
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The right patty can develop a profitable
business to his community, We have open
territory. If you think that you can
Qualify write ONTARIO FIRE PREVEN.
TION AND SERVICE, 645 Queen Street
Eget, Toronto. A11 Inquiries treated con.
ttdenttolly.
HOME Money M011105 Plans! Selected '
Occupation., 00115, to start. Facts for
sueceee. Details free. Write: Lockwood.
100 10. 21 Street, Brooklyn, New York.
PATENTh
AN OFFER to every Inventor—List of m -
0,000n, and full Information sant free.
The Ramsey Co,. Registered Patent Attar
osis, 270 Bek Street. Ottawa..
FETHERSTONHACGH A Company Patent
Attorney., Established 1800 800 Ont.
varsity Ave.. Toronto. Patents all =entries..
PERSONAL
01.00 TRIAL offer. Twenty-five deluxe
per,onal reQulrements, Latest Catalogue
included. The Medico Agency. Box 124
Terminal A. Toronto, Ontario.
STOP SMOKING
11' .deeiroua of ridding youroNf of
CIGARETTE ADDICTION
do it the easy way. Tobacco Eliminator
oarrleaoa "malefaction or money back"
guarantee. For tree booklet. write C.
Ring ?barmen! Corporation Ltd., Box
803, Walkerviile. -Ont.
CIGARETTE. Smoke Rings Secret 51.00.
Free. with Crou'nd Ntfidelity 40 watt
tape recorder 1005,00, two 25 war
Speakers. 066.00. James, Box 929, India
California.
CTG.L:R.ETTE expenses balved. many other
benefit.. Send 01,00 for regular an(
king-alze units. A. G. Walters, Box 353
Carlsbad. New Mexico.
ay beWarninq
Backache is often caused by lazy kidney
action. When kidneys get 051 of order,
excess acids and wastes remain in the
systenl. Then backache, disturbed rest
or that tired -out and heavy -headed feeling
may soon follow That's the time to take
Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's stimulate
the kidneys to normal action. Then you
feel better—sleep' better—work better.
Get Dodd's Kidney Pills now. sl
ISSUE 8 - 1954