The Brussels Post, 1954-4-7, Page 3TNICaIVer# SPORTS COLUMN
4 E ste4 Pe/1`:' a
• n is now quits unthinkable that, Sug-
gested as a possibility, Canada should
Withdraw from further representation in
what is known as the "world's hockey
SerieS."
Russia made such a withdrawal quite
inconceivable, by the simple process of
defeating the Canadian team, in one of the -great sports upsets
of all time. For this was Russia's first entry into these cham-
pionships, the queiity of the Soviets was held in light esteem,
and so the ,defeat was all the more stunning, all the more
calculated to provide Moscow's propaganda machine with rieh
material for sounding the glory of the Soviet athletes.
Under these circumstances, suffering from one of the most
humiliating defeats inflicted upon ifs forces in the game at
which these Dominions inreality rule the world,. Canada
cannot possibly retire until a day of reckoning has
extinguished the fires of arrogant bluster which this triumph
is certain to set alight in the Soviet press.
For retirement at this point would be rated as sheer
defeatism, and indeed it would be very difficult, praeticahy
impossible, to convince other European nations that Canada's
supremacy in its greatest sport had not been taken over by
Russia. And, what is much more important from the stand-
point of national pride, it alight be even more difficult to
convince the world that Canada had huffily taken the
childish, unsportsmanlike attitude: "If we can't win, we won't
play "
It has been said that, in view of the public's unfavourable
attitude towards the club,.: Canada should quit this synthetic
world series;. synthetic, that is, in its title qualities, though
definitely real. in the number of competing nations.
L•, Quit? That's not in Canada'ssports tutor*. We've never
been quitters nor cry-babies in any competitive sport. And if
Canada quits now, In defeat, those are the stigmas that will
lfe;jtung, upon us, nationally.
What champion '.doesn't get an unfavourable reception
whenrhe invades foreign soil? Did those advocating Canada's
wither'awal ever hear the Detroit Bed Wings cheered in, say,
Toronto or Gordie Howe applauded when he invades the
domain of his rival, Rocket Richard?
'the jeers, in such' cases, and in Canada's overseas -hockey,
case too, are real tributes to greatness. Anyone can get cheers
at home; Jack Dempsey was one of the most unpopular figures
in ringdom while he was .champion. Thousands rooted regu-
larly for his defeat. Dempsey went out fighting, and so turned
mob dislike; to fanatic hero-worship.
Canada can do the same. If we're going to retire, let's
do so as champions, not In the face of defeat, inflicted by an
under -rated opponent.
' Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed
• ; by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calved House, 431 Yong* Sl., Toronto.
CaLvettDISTILLERS LIMITED
AMHERSTBURO, ONTARIO
Dress Fabrics To
"Dress" Bedrooms
t
It is a wise textile designer
who recognizes his own fabrics
this season. In New York; fur-
niture upholstery materials are
going into women's suits. And
in Toronto, spring coals made
from automotive fabrics were
featured at the fashion show held
in connection with the recent
National Motor Show.
But fashion designers havep'ta •
corner on ingenuity when it
comes to fabrics. $o ne,shopping
for materials, to make up into
bedspreads, dust ruffles, vanity
skirts and window treatments
are heading straight for the
dress fabric department.
This is partly due to the trend
toward lighter, more airy
materials and partly to the rustle
of spring which every year sees
a search forfabrics that are
fresh and crisp to replace those
that are faded, heavy and limp.
Among the dress fabrics wind-
ing up in bedrooms because they
look spethereal yet are so stur-
dy are tile nylon puckers now
blooming in springtime profu-
sion In stores egerywhere. These
stitch up, readily into matching
bedspreads and vanity skirts that
waste no time drying and re-
quire little primping with an
iron. They come in sprightly
florais, eheery checks, sophisti-
cated stripes shot with metallic
threads and designs woven with
threads of "Orlon" to look like
hand embroidery. Their modest
prices permit them to be used
with a free hand to co-ordinate
bed, vanity and possibly a swag
valance.
A patterned or a textured fab-
ric is usually more pleasing when
it is repeated somewhere else in
the room. One pattern or tex-
ture is often sufficient for av-
erage -size bedrooms. On the
other hand, bedspread, vanity
skirt and draperies all in the
same definite pattern may be
somewhat -over -powered in an
average or•.;smallish bedroom:
In this case swag valances and
airy marquisette curtains are
sometimes substituted for
draperies. However, marquisette
curtaining usually isn't found
among nylon dress fabrics since
many of the fabrics such as those'
made of "Orlon" acrylic fibre
have been specially developed
for sun-bathed windows.
Fabrics are more vital to the
beauty of a bedroom than to any
other room. With fabrics such
as these available, nobody need
go out on a limb to make it the
prettiest room in the house.
The Tigers Don't
Miss The Sahibs
Recently published statistics
reveal that in 1952 and 1953 in
the Calcutta district of India
alone, 25 more people were kill-
ed each year by tigers than the
average number per year dur-
ing the entire period of British,
rule,
One explanation of this state
of affairs is the disappearance
of British game -hunters. An-
other is the sharp reduction in
huge incomes and personal
spendings of former Maharajas
who used to stage organized
tiger hunts.
So' tiger hunts in India are
now the exception rather than
the rule. Consequently the num-
ber of jungle beasts 'that roam
from their fastnesses into towns
and villages is increasing
rapidly.
And it is not only tigers that
constitute a menace. Not long
ago some hyenas entered a vil-
lage in the Far'ukhabad district
of the United Provinces, carried
off four children and ate them.
Twirling Tol-Her smile' helps, but It's rally her talent. That's
why four-yearold Linda Kay Bialas Is wearing all those medals.
The baton -swirling tot has accumulated over 25 medals and
trophies while competing in five mid -west stater during the
past year.
When They Move
They Take It API
Moving house Is a job in itself,
and most people are content if
they can effect the transfer suc-
cessfully with all their belong•
Ings. They .0(p rlot,lus allyt,bother
to tape with tbent.,tieln me or
number plate off the fronnt door,
6r the board with the name of
the street On it at the end of
the road, and set them up at
their new abode.
But that le what they do . on
some of the Malay islands. For,
years there it has been the cus-
tom, on Chan, mg one's domicile,
to remove 1n-Ot Only one's own
belongings, but '- anything else
one can lay one's hands on as
well. Fspecielly the road signs.
In consequel.ce the p o s t al
authorities sometimes find
houses and even streets tipper:
eptly renamed almost overnight.
Not infrequently letters and par-
cels have had to be sent back
marked "address unknown."
It has been a source of worry
to the postman, to say the least.
Though they have a respect for
the old custom, the switching of
house names and street titles by
the residents is a bit confusing
at times.
So ;there ,s;talk' thaI•,in°future
if will be an dffellce for a;person.
moving house anywhere in °Ivla-
laya to take pact of the local
geography with him.
•
Leaves Her Home
Only At Night
Behind chained and padlocked
gates, cordoned by barbed-wire
fences :and a dozen tierce and
prowling dog's, Edinburgh's Dark
Lady holds herself aloof ... and
defies the British Treasury.
The finance experts discovered
that she held a vast hoard of
dollars in North America, on
which she had disclosed no in-
formation. Letters were • never
answered. Visitors &ere never
admitted to the mysterious pre-
cincts of her home.
Finally a policeman had to
climb the steel fence and .brave
the dogs to deliver. her a sum-
mons, The lady was fined . .
'but she did not yield the -dollars.
A fortune is lying, in Canadian
banks alone ... and here's where
the Dark Lady faces'a problem
tougher even than.the,Treasury.
Letters from he Canadian
bankers have been simiiar'ly ig-
nored but under' the Can-
adian Bank Act unless they re-
ceive a reply within the next
two years her money will becon-
fiscated.
Many of her closest neigh-
bours have never seen the Dark
Lady, so-called because she
dresses in black and leaves her
home only at night,
Consider the ,amazing case of
the Rev. Fred Densham. He,
too, surrounded his house with
barbed wire entanglements and
seldom emerged from seclusion.
s
Together Again—CheeChee and Blackie are'logeth'ee again in
their home. This photo was taken tifter'CheeChee, left, Was
discovered playing "greasemonkey" in the motor of a- parked
carr Police help. was needed to discover the simian's monkey-
-if' shines. •
Twenty years ago, he quarrelled
with his Cornish parishioners,
but his bishop declined to re-
move him from the living, As
rector of Warleggan, Fren Den -
sham had broken no ecclesiasti-
cal law.
Every man -jack of the church
council resigned and the vil-
lagers boycotted the church.
Every Sunday. for twenty, years,
hoWever, the rector of Warleg-
gan continued to hold services
in his empty church.
Instead of a congregation, he
put place cards in the front pews
bearing the names of Warleg-
gan rectors since the thirteenth
century. "I prefer my congre-
gation of ghosts," he once said.
"They cannot object to my in-
novations."
Then the other day the rec-
tory was strangely silent. No
smoke coiled from the chimneys.
Eventually police broke in and
found the hermit 'rectory lying
dead.
This was what happened, too,
when Rose Hare -Winton died in
her house of secrets at Chobham,
Surrey, and hundreds of tinted
chickens and guinea -pigs in the
grounds gave the alarm. The
police found the place overrun
with rats and mice, which the
strange lady of Chobham would
never allow to be trapped.
In the dining -room the table
was laid as if ready for a Christ -
Inas celebration ... but it must
have been waiting ready for
years, for crackers and choco-
lates crumbled to dust as soon as
they were touched. Miss Rose
Hare -Winton left all her $150,000
for the care of animals.
A few columns back we paid
a mite of tribute to the late
Battling Nelson, who, in Janu-
ary of this year passed away,
almost forgotten, in a Chicago
hospital. From a reader up North
who says that record books are
scarce up amongthe forest of
uranium -claim stakes, asks us to
settle an argument as to whether
or not Joe .Gans, the great color-
ed lightweight, ever beat Nelson.
• •
The answer is in the negative.
Gans fought Nelson twice, and
both times the Battler proved
that stamina and ability to take
It will beat speed and skill -pro-
viding, that is, you possess suf-
ficient of those qualities to pro-
vide the necessary margin. And,
of course, it should not be over-
looked that Mr. Nelson had con-
siderable youth running for him
as well, which is by no means
bad in a totigh battle.
•
* •
It was on July 4, 1908, that
Gans and Nelson met for the first
time, before a huge crowd in the
Mission` Street Arena in San
Francisco. For the first five
rounds it was all Gans, who
slashed and battered the fair-
haired Nelson until the latter's
face looked as if it had been run
throught a hamburger grinder.
Still, he couldn't stop Nelson's
ceaseless rushing although, at
the end of the sixth stanza Joe
was miles ahead on points.
•• • a
The tide of battle turned in the
Seventh.. Taking half a dozen
punches in order to land one The
battler hammered away at Cans
until :QC was forced to clinch—
Something, till then, almost un-
heard-of for the lightning fast
Baltimore Negro to do.
From . the seventh .to . the
twelfth it was fairly even with
both men taking enough punish-
ment to cause a modern referee
to stop the bout. Then, at the
start of twelfth Nelson caught
Gan with a terrific" right that
sent him•to the ropes, and follow-
ed it with a left uppercut that
had Joe on his knees. Right and
left to'the'head had Gans on the
floor for a nine count but al-
though he looked as if he couldn't
last the round, a straight left to
the jaw slowed Nelson up a bit
and a second or so later came
the gong. • * *
Under the terrific battling
Gans weakened fast. He was on
the canvas again in the thir-
teenth, and agar in the six-
teenth, this time for a nine -
count.
* • *
The end came in the seven-
teenth. Three times Nelson bat-
tered Gans to the floor, and the
last time Joe just couldn't make
it to his feet again. He went to
his knees, sagged forward on his
face and then,'badly hurt, rolled
over on his back. Game as they
came, hestruggled to get on his
feet, and finally managed to do
so. But it was too late, Referee
had already counted ten and
Battling Nelson %vas the winner.
• • *
Gans demanded a return
match, of course; and it is rather -
interesting to note that they met
for the second time hardly more
than two months later—on Sep-
tember Oth to be exact. Nowa-
days they'd take far longer than
that arguing over how the purse
would be split!
• • ■
This time Gans lasted till the
twenty-first round; but although
Trouble In Russia•,
• Leaders of the Communist
Youth League of Soviet Russia
Are becoming alarmed. The worst
thing in their eyes that could
happen to young Communists is
taking'place in the Gorky region,
and the leaders are demanding
that action be taken to halt it.
What is happening is that
some members of the league are
being converted away from Com-
munism to religion. Some have
even gone so far as to be mar-
ried in church, and Korky region
officials of the league are under
fire for not .stopping the trend.
The story of defection in Gorky
was told in a copy of Komsomol
Pravda, the league's newspaper,
which recently was received in
this. country. The paper said
Baptists in the Gorky region suc-
ceeded last year in persuading 19
young Communists to resign and
turn to religion and that the
Seventh Day Adventists convert-
ed 18. `Four members of a coI-
lective farm 'were expelled for
.getting married in church, a
clear violation of . Communist
league regulations.
The story also railed against a
Priest in the „area who has told
his flock to teach their children
'the Lord's Prayer and the Psalms
and to hang crosses around their
necks. These things, it implied,
should not be permitted to con-
tinue.
Thirty-seven converts to re-
ligion may not seem a large
number,; but when it is remem-
bered that all of these young
people had spent their entire
lives under Communist rule, in-
doctrination and influence, their
conversion' is rather remarkable.
That some would risk expulsion
from their home and jobs to be
wed under church auspices is
evidence that 35 years of Com-
munism have not been able to
crush the feeling' for God within
the souls of men It is no won-
der the Communist rulers heve
erected the Iron Curtain. If
their enslaved people ever were
able to live as free men, their
control would suffer greatly.—
Houston
reatly—Houston (Texas) Post.
the fight was spectacular enough,
Nelson was in the driver's seat
practically all the way, The end
came with Gans on the floor, not
unconscious but just too weak to
rise, watching Referee Eddie
Smith wave his hands in rhythm
with the count of ten.
* P •
That was the last time Joe
Gans ever entered a prize ring.
One of the greatest lightweights
in history, he had held the title
for eight years, until Battling
Nelson—with an assist from Fath-
er Time—took it from him.
r •
Gans died two years later, but
his conqueror lasted for another
four decades. He lost his title ill
February 1910 to Ad Wolgast,
when the bout was halted in the
40th round to save Nelson from
further punishment. For years
he was a popular figure at the
ringside whenever there was an
important fight, drawing great
applause from the fans wherever
he appeared.
• • •
Then, little by little, he sank
out of sight, Although he had
Made what was a fortune in that
era, poor investments and an *
open ear for any hard -luck story
caused it to melt away. At the
age of sixty-five he got a job as
clerk in the Chicago postoffiee,
Then, last January, broke, be-
wildered and 'weighing only 80
pounds, what was left of Battl-
ing Nelson showed up at an
Illinois sanitarium, "I am very
tired" he whispered to one of
the muses. It was the end of the
long trail for the blacksmith's
helper from Hegewisch, Illinois,
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WASHABLE WALLPAPERS
WALLPAPER Dtetrlbutoro of Canada,
with headquarter. at Walkervllle and
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largest manufacturer in Canada -. for
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o1 new w0110apeea. Every roll le the
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Canadian manufactured, Standard price.,
His profits! Accurate Auto Electric, 1048
de Bullion Street, :Montreal 18,..
USED SCHOOL BUSSES
REO School Bee — 1949 Mo4,1 — 49
90esenger — Fully equipped — Excellent
Condition ......:........_...,......:....:... .. 92,600.00
1911 School Bus — 19 passenger Metro.
Panel Body, L120 LH.C. Engine — Eco-
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A 90 -day Meehanleni Warranty on a 60.
60 bads on above units — Terms ar-
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We have nanny other Magee and Modele
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Phone or write . , MAI'f01r 1171
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SPECKLED TROUT
20 Acres on n pretty Muskoka Lake.
Frontage on lake 200 feet by 8800 deep.
Speckled- trout probably best south of
Niplgon. 14-20 inches, quality can be
proved 07 appointment sufficiently early.
Tell your epecirled trout fishing friend,
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STAPLERS and Tackers. largo and
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POST'S REMEDIES
Sent Peet Free on Receipt of Price
880 00000 St. lee Corner of Logan
TORONTO
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for Regular size, 82.76 Large Economi-
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P.O. BOX 12, WINDSOR, ONT.
BECOME Wealthy! Where' and bow to
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Culver City, California.
"INSTALL YOURSELF" AWNING and
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PATENTS
AN OFFER to every Inventor—List of in-
vontibns end 1u11 • information • sent free.
The Ramsay Co.. Registered Patent At-
torney.. '279 Bank Street, Ottawa.
FETISERSTONHAUGH & 'Company Pee
tent Attorneys. reabllebod 1890. 000 Uni-
versity Ave.. Toronto. Pntent0 all Coon'
trice.
PERSONAL —..
LONELY, LET CANADA'S GREATEST
club Introduce ypu to lonely people de•
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Club, Box 125, Calgary. Alberta.
91.00 TRIAL offer. Twenty-five deluxe
Personal requirements, Latest Catalogue
Included The Medico Agency -Tine 124
Terminal A. Toronto, Ontario
TOBACCO Eliminator — A Scientific
guaranteed remedy for etgarette addle -
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free booklet write C. 1000 Phormocal
Corp. Ltd.. Hos 808, Walkerville, Ont,
WANTED
MAN AND WIFE
Ars farm help on dairy farm near Toron-
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IT MAY BE
YOUR LIVER
If life's not worth living
It may be your livert
We a Mott it Sakes Up to two mete of liver
bile a day to keep your digeotive true!, top
shape! If your liver bile is not flowing freely
your food may not you feel
. gas bloats up
all the fun and epnekle qo out of life..TThat i
when 100 need mild gentle Carter's Little
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feel that happy days are here again! Don't
ever stay sunk Always keep Carter'% Little
Liver Pine on hand. 97f at vole dmngist
SAFES
Protect .sour BOOKS and CASH them
FIRE and THIEVES, We have a elite
anti tsps of Safe, or Catena. for any sun
Pose. Visit tie or write for orlee. Mo. to
Dent, w.
YLEI LIMITED
TORONTO SAFE WORKS'
14h. Ft'ont St, IO„ Pel et°
• Established 1866
"ISSUE 15 — 1054