HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1951-4-11, Page 7Captain Cook Sails
Under Seated. Orders
Th, Idea of a sten h,ur continent
has persisted Mee Ilan first ree•
of;ui%Vit that flim pl:nett was a
sphere, for a great laud mass at
the bmf
tu ut mfht•
t world 11•
I t cls sr ron-
,'d
t 1 urge,satry to maintain the
balance u1 the globe ill spare,.
Ale•:ander Dalrymple, the learned
eighteenth century hydrographer of
the hast India t ompauy, stirred the
British imagination by the predies
lion 1Ino the population probably
would (sweet) fifty millions. 'There
was little realization of the intense
cold in the far south ----scientists
shared nith srhuolehildren the
naive assumption that the tempera
tune was higher smith of the egna•
tor.
Early in 1768 the naval bark En-
deavor left England OH one of the
most significant esploring expedi-
tions in history. its ostensible pur-
pose was the transport of astrono-
mers to observe the transit of the
planet \'elms in Tahiti, but just be-
fore sailing the Endeavor's cont.
mender, Lieutenant Janes 1 oak,
then, at the outset of his career as
one of the greatest explorers in
history, was• given ,secret orders. A
copy of these orders was discovered
in the Admiralty archive; a few
years ago
After the est:rummers had been
net ashore, Cook's instructions read,
the Endeavor was to sail directly
southward to the reputed Molar con-
tinent, There the commander was
ordered "to observe the nature of
the soil and the products thereof,
the beasts and fowls that inhabit or
frequent ft, the fish that are -to he
found in the rivers or on the coast
and in what plenty; and in case you
fuel any mines, minerals, or valu-
able stones you are to bring home
specimens of each, as also such
specimens of the seed,', fruits and
grains as you may be able to col-
lect. You are likewise to observe
the genius, temper, disposition, and
number of the natives fund endeavor
by all proper moans t0 cultivate
a friendship and alliance,"
Cooke followed orders exactly on
his 17(18 voyage He failed to find
the expected continent, but he•ex.
plowed and claimed foe he British
crown the eastern coast of Austra-
lia. The Earl of Sandwich, First
Lord of the Admiralty, was deter-
mined that the cross
of ti ("
. t. George
would Ily over the Smith Pole in
his lifetime, and four years later
Cook again ryas dispatched to the
Soul Pacific with orders to push
his ttvu "hips southward as far as
the pole ---if he :lid not sooner dis-
cover the continent.—and to eiretun-
navigate the globe in high southern
toluenes. Cook succeeded in reach-
ing latitude 71 south, where he
faced an impenetrable nail of ice.
For months he skirted the white
harrier without finding an opening.
—And he was forced reluctantly to
turn northward, satisfied that if any
souther» continent existed- it was
uninhabited and probably unin-
habitable: —From "Thr White Con-
tinent," by 'Thomas R. Henry.
Horse Sense — Determined to
keep "Mary" the horse dry for
the 37th annual parole of van
horses in London':; Regent
Pai'k, Jean Perrin,: 8, shares
her umbrella with the animal.
There were 37,327 horses in
this year's parade—all con -
fending the "mane" event.
TAKEN FOR GRANTED .
Farmer Rubinson broke his trac-
tor, so he decided to drive to the
next farm and borrow one from
Farmer Brown.
As he, was driving he started
thinking; "I wonder if old Brown
will lend lie that tractor?" Ten
minutes later lie' was thinking: "I
doubt if old Brown will lead it to
me." As he got near to the neigh-
bouring farm he thought: "i'nt sure
old Brown won't lend Inc that trac-
tor." As he knocked at aha farm-
house doors "No," he thought, "I'm
dare .certain he won't lend it to mel"
Farmer Brown came to the door,
smiled, and asked: "Well, what
can: 1' de for, You?"
• ;'T just came to ,say," snorted
.Robinson, "that you can keep your
bloomin' tractor!
THE FARM. FRONT
c)olapien
1
111o,
hall lnllhr l %„1, ell i -' he
':trru.,ing incof uulrbul fa -:es when
1 rime back to the nutter of making
a will so talon after the bast piece I
wi'nte on the ,11bjeet. 3low"ever,
quite r, e„Illly I rail ;tyro '.s the' re-
sults of a survey which se,med. ,o
inleresliug than 1 feel I should pas,
.item along,
This .survey tails mad) by a big
\nteriean agricultural ma;nzine, .A
large group of farm w'nnlen were
asked the question, "11 as your bus -
hand made a will?" and when the
replies were stwted out ter results
were las follow;:
Yes -26 per cent.
14o-65 per cent
Don't know -9 per cent,
: * x
Only 7 per cent of the w omen in
the 20-,34 age group thought their
husbands had tnade a will, But 47
per cern' of :hose over SO reported
that a will hart been made.
That still leaves a majority of
Mrmers in every age group with-
out wills. This is good Hews for
lawyers. When anybody dies with-
out a will, there is more work for
lawyers, more chance for family
arguments,
*
Many women realise this, and
wish their husbands did. One Wolm-
an said:
"I wish more were written about
Men slaking wills. It seen!, such a
hard metier :o talk about. When
you're young, you're always Wait -
Mg until you're older and have
more to will. For some, that is Mo
late,"
* ex
An older woman said "\ly man
doesn't have a will and w'on't make
one. He says women are too dumb
to handle money,"
it :r *
Even more important tient a will
is the willingness of husbands to
talk over farm business v ith their
wives.
k k *
Inch'•'•
this
,„farm 1«Lel 11 11 '
ttsban
ds in the fam-
ilies surveyed snake a goo,! record.
Most wives are like the woinen who
connmenlcd:
"Yves, my husband keeps me in-
formed. We always work together.
i hear some .women say they don't
know anything at all about the
family business. T n'ottt•in't like
that." * * *
rhe poll also asked: "13 your hum
band %vete to pass away suddenly,
how touch would you know about
the handy business affairs? Check
the s'atetient that comes nearest
fitting your siitiatiun"
* *
1. My Husband keeps me inform.
ed and the -to -date on all business
matters -63 per cent.
2. I think I could get along all
right, but we don't discuss it much
—26 per cent.
3. I'd be lost. My husband doesn't
tell me anything about business
affairs -8 per cent.
4. Not sure -3 per cent•
* 8
Middle-aged farmers make the
best record 1 keeping •:ices in-
formed, The young and the old rate
about equal.
One farm woman reported: "Yea,
T. could get along all right so far
as the business is concerned. 3 keep
alt :he books, and Pm not sure but
what I know more about it than
he does."
Another woman said: "Ile does -
n'1 tell me until afterward when
he has a deal on, But I Keep the
books, so I guess you'd say he
kept me informed."
• *
A young woman said: "\fy hus-
band is of the old school, but I
manage to find out pretty well
what's going on,"
* * *
One farmer in Cherokee empty
testified for his wife; "My wife
does most of the buying and han-
dles the money at our house."
1-n another. home the woman was
The Way Out—Rookie umpires as well as rookie baseball
players often get their break during spring training. Umpire
Jill Duffy, at left, up from the American Association, received
a fete tips from veteran American League diamond arbiter Art
I'assarella at a Lakeland training camp. Daffy imitates I'assar-
ella who demonstrates the way to call a runner out.
more doubtful: "l don't know what
the children and 1 would •lo if any-
thing happened to John. Ile tells
me about things, but what can a
woman do to carry on a farm or
settle when you have to know
about income tax and resort's?"
O'her women, loo, wondered holy
they could get along with their
husbands gone. One woman re-
ported: "1 think 1 knot, quite a bit
about the business, but when I
really start to figuring on findingin crops and raising livestock, I
wonder if 1 know as much as I
think I do."
1
Still :mother woman sa'd; "No,
sty. husband doesn't talk much
about the farm business. But when
lie buys a new ear, he sure likes
to have me put the egg and chicken
nlntmey in to ihelp pay for it."
PIORT
1 'IC
In a recent issue of The New
York Times Magazine we noticed
an article baring the eye-catching
title WHAT iS REALLY TIIE
FASTEST SPORT? It is a title
especially eye-catching to Canadian
optics because over here for many
years past, we have had it so
gouged into us that hockey is "the
world's fastest sport" that most of
us have come to believe that state-
ment unquestioningly, as alt article
of fifth,
* % *
However, the author of said
article—Arthur Daley, Sports Edi-
tor of 'Che Times—is a mal who
has been around. Ile has watched,
and reported oil, more sport and a
wider variety of sport than most
men; and his opinions :nest be
respected eve'i 11 he arrives at a
conclusion liable to cause much
gnashing of teeth among the plug-
ger,. for hockey, paid and unpaid,
* ,! %
Speed—says Mr. Daley ---is an
esscntiai element of all major sports
and naturally- all indispensable part
of all good sporting arguments.
The devotee of one game is con-
vinced that his favorite is the near-
est thing to terrestrial lightning and
that all other sports are molasses
by contrast, while the fan for an-
other sport holds the contrary view.
* * *
1 t a poll of sports writers were
to be taken, Daley thinks they
aright well vote that the fastest
spot of all is jai alai—the S.palish
and Latin-American variety of
handball played with a basket
strapped to the wrist. But, he adds,
they would only serve up such a
verdict after lnoldng for the near-
est emergency exit.
'k :k s
\\''at determines which sport is
the fastest? Is It the speed of the
objet in motion, or the amount of
rapid and continuous action by the
players? That is to say, sliced is
Figure Plying—N'cw helicopter training program includes this -
figttre eight flying exercise, At a height of 10 feet, the craft is
ruanetivet'ed over the numeral painted oh the rtilta<ty, The new
helicopeter instruction was started in response to the grooving
proof- of the value of the planes in Korea.
relative, and a man careening clown.
a mountainside on a bobsled at
seventy miles an hour will get a
far greater sensation of speed than
he would in a jet plane flashing
through the stratosphere faster
than sound. And speed in sports is
relative too. Every schoolboy knows
that a horse can outrun a man; but
holy natty of then: know that in a
100 yard dash the horse will finish
se no 11
* 5 5
Daley recalls thc historic occa-
sion when John McGraw, down in
Pavans, promoted a race between
a horse and his speediest basc-
rtulnter, Flans Lobert, In later years
Lobert, when asked the result, used
to say "I will by a nose"—which
might have been considerable of
a margin, at that, as Hans had a
schnozzle which was well up in the
Jintnly Durante class,
* * ,
How much bearing does actual
speed have .in rating the fastest
sport? the article goes on, Gene
Sarazen once drove a golf
ball tat
a measured 120 miles per hour. The
utnhost speed of a hockey puck has
been set by calibrating machines at
a mere 88 m.p.h. But does that
make golf a faster game than
hockey? We don't have to answer
that one for you,
5 * *
Borrowing some figures front
Frank Menke's "Encyclopedia of
Sport," Daley compares baseball,
boxing and tennis, The great Bob
Feller—when he had that hop on
his fast one—threw a baseball at
a speed of 96.6 miles an hour, Joe
Louis' fists were once measured as
travelling at 127 miles an hour,
those of Jack Dempsey 8 miles
faster than that. But a tennis ball
whammed by 133g 13111 Tilden re-
gistered 151 miles an hour. ,Would
you say that tennis was the fastest
sport of the three? That is ,unless
you're a dyed-in-the-wool tennis
bug.
* * *
Baseball products speedy action
—at times, With the bases fall a
hatter rips al grounder at the op-
posing shortstop, who elects to try
for a double play. The pitcher
throws — the batter swings — the
shortstop fields the ball and tosses
it to the second baseman, Who
catches the ball and relays it to
first. Fite Wren are involved in that
play --and it all takes only. five
seconds to' make,
* * '*
- But that doesn't make baseball
tops for speed, The play stops at
each half inning for the teams to
change sides, There are long de-
lay's between each pitch. Even the
pitcher, the •busiest ratan on the
team, shakes only about a hundred
throws a gats There' plenty of
speed—but lots of slow intervals
ton,
• ,s u
Football, too, has a lot 01 the
"pause that refreshes"—or that irri•
tales if one wants continuous action.
Two running plays per minute of
this sixty -minute game are about
average, Although -it has exciting
moments, the, gridiron sport is not
a contender for "fastest" distinc-
tion. Nor is boxing, Ring action.
may be fast and constant, but there
is something about the 13ustrtl
Beak Industry that 3; at cross-
purposes to tihis groping search, It
is too highly individualistic, which
may also be said of tennis and
golf.
't r „
The sauce thing is true of the
"fastest sport" --jai alai --which is
played with two men on a leant. It
gets its reputation from the inces-
sant
ncessant sprinting of the players around
the court, a three -sided affair that
may be 175 feet or more in length,
and from the velocity of the base-
ball -type missile which they catch
A SAF'
OINTMiENT
soul hod by suss, of tlmc sp,ion
shaped :11 (let wielded with one
arch. 1 ike the games it resembles
handball and ra epneis it 3, a
pante ul iilditidnat
4 a
I Iniini Nuthor Daley y
be -
tins tr, ads S un delicate ground;
sort it i5 probably a good thing
for all r,s,rrhed that, when the
attic), appt:art d, Conn '*myth' and
the
r( -1 "f hu,Lty 1?ig 11311as.8
were probably tau much engaged
spa i1,,playoff, to rale uruire of
It seems that wh, n fans debate,
,1 the snbj,et of speed he says—
hey :ire talking about [earl sport.
13 this 1,r so, it brings us to a
ro[nparimin of hockey, which malty
consider our speediest game, and
basket ball, whose nh11shroom
growth in the past seventeen years
has nn parallel in athletic history.
Almost by a proses of elimination
the ,:nest for the "fastest sport"
dt'slgnal Intl has in rf.st ietWeen
these two,
When the ice game came to the
U,S, from Canada in 1924 it was
caller! the "world's fastest sport,"
The label has gone unchallenged
and the impression remains that
hockey is faster that] basketball.
At the deadly risk of losing his
Canadian readers, this reporter de-
nies it. I think i,asketball is faster
than hockey, 1 admit that the puck -
chasers give a greater illusion of
spec(! but I insist that itsis just
that --:au illusion, -
k * t
'1'o offset the illusion consider the
relative speed of the players. The
speed -skater wears far faster skates
than the hockey player, if he can't
(as has been proved) surpass a
sprinter at the short distance of
100 yards, how can he ever gather
momentum enough to move faster
than the man on foot in the restrict-
ed area of a hockey court? More-
over, a mail wearing gum -soled
shoes on a board fluor has notch
more maneuverability than a man
wearing skates an ice. It isn't only
speed afoot that counts in this
over-all picture of swiftness. One
must also take 1n10 consideration
the flow of movement, which is
more rapid on the basketball floor
titan
oilh
1 C
ice.
'5 *'
The game has become so swift,
so filled with constant action, that
it has even reached Into the press
box. No longer can a basketball re-
porter keep his scoring tablets and
simultaneously write a running
story of the game. He has to bring
a "scorekeeper" with him to keep
track of the avalanche of points: '
* * n
Baseketball has sprinted ahead of
its refrigerated rival in team speed
and in the process has become the
most popular sport. To the long
run, its speed that counts.
* * y
To all of which—with a profound
bow to Mr. Daley for his help—
we merely add a couple of obser-
vations. Basketball was invented by
a Canadian. Anti hockey-, no mat-
ter how you rate it as a sport, has
yet failed, in all its comparatively
Lengthy history, to develop even
one per cent of the crooks and
double crossers that basketball has
turned out in its comparatively
short one. \Vhat is more, we defy
basketball to produce any radio an-
nouncer who can slake even its
speediest Contest sound one-tenth
as fast and exciting as Foster Hew-
itt turns some of tihe slowest and
creepiest hockey struggles into for
the benefitof the faithful,
Eighty years ago Irwin S.
t'ierce's mother gave hint a jar
of blackberry jam for his tenth
birthday, The other clay, Pierce
now a San Francisco resident ,ate
the jam and said it tasted fine. "1
couldn't resist the temptation any
longer," be said,
S AFE
t'roteet your 101IK5 end CAS! rreIn
FMB and 'Vt. We have a else
and type of Sate, or 'Cabinet, Inc ally
narllea0. V1511 its nr Writ., for p185ra,
rte., to -pent, Il',
a J.bCJ,TAVLOR LIMITED
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Established 1539
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_ 118(1( 11
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(MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS
368 Bloor St, W„ Toronto
Branches'
44 King St, tiamllteh
72. Rideau Ste, Ottawa
WE always have big and litho bualnescea
for male at all 11men. For particular:,
w'r'ite to:
PHILIP YOUNG, ILEA05011
07 Frederick Street - Kitchener, Ontario,
BUILD A PAYING BUSINESS
—Full Or Snare Time —
W
We will train you to operate your Olen
"SHOE BUSINESS" with your own ex-
clusive territory. Complete senate camas
FRE10—to help you sell Canada's °neat
:hoes. Write now to:
DAYSTEL 5110E 0021PANF
450 King Street west - Toronto, Canada
NURSERY 550011
FRUIT Trees, small fruits, Shade trues,
19Vergreens, Shrubs, Roans, .111 leading
varletlea, at right prices. Send today for
free catalogue. Central Nurseries Limited,
A. G. Hull & Son, St, Cathorineo. Ont.
STRAWBERRY PLANTS
"I(ellogg-Premier„a "Valentine”; "Fair.
fax"; Senator -Dunlop," 812.00 thousand;
82,00 hundred, Cleaned, Trinuned. Dianne
Free, True to name. Money order, please,
Roes Carroll, Norwich, Ontario,
ORDER NOW FOR SPRING DELIVERY
—Chinese Elm 12 inch else 100 for
80.01; Dwarf Apple Trees 1Macinto01 or
Spy or coronas); Dwarf Pear Tree. (Barb
tett or Clapp'' Favorite) 8-tt, size, your
choice, 03,00 each or 3 for 87.60' Hardy
26 for 13,88: Giant Exhibition Paeony
Privet Hedging plants 12 to 18 mph size,
roots In red, white or pink 9 for 81.80.
Plum trees, sweet eating Burbank, Lora.
hard or Grand Duke, 6 -ft alto 22.00 each
or 2 for 86.00, Free Colored Garden
Guide with Every Order, Brook4ale —
Kingsway Nurseries, Bowmanvlllo, Ont.
PATENTS
AN OFFER to every Inventor—List o1 In-
venti0ne and full Information sent tree.
5110 Ramsay Co., Registered Patens Anter
amis. 273 Banit Street, Ottawa,
FETHERSTONI(AOGE & Company, Pa -
teat
So]
lotto,
e, Entuhilshed1130.150
6,Ray Street. TorontoBooklet o1 informs,
cion on ,cancel.
STAMPS
DO you collect stamps? Send Inc selection
on Prices tory aEMCns. St. r Sanwa,er Niagara
Niagara
False, Ontario,
TEA CREELS WANTED
PEEL CONTY
512ACHER wanted Inc September In S.S.
No. 4, Toronto Gore, 9 miles north of
Mallon, School bus service to Brampton.
Music teacher. Minimum salary, 02,000.
Allowance for experience.
Apply. stating experience. age. name of
previous Inspector, etc„ to Mrs, 2, Mor.
Orion, Halton, Out,
OCCASION TO LEARN FRENCH
WANTED, girl, 22, to teach lengllsh,
hrlYng te wheel. Salary; 0 04 boarding annly 0.� Rue! weekly,
Pas:. age, Levis, Quebec,
WANTED
CHILDREN'S nurse with references. Write
Urn. C. Fl. Barrett. 3 Alexandra Rd.,
Galt, Ont.
WANTED flocks to supply us with hatch-
ing'kgs for 1062 warns, On some breeds.
fro can take ens. practically the year
around. If you would like anywhere from
I6c to 260 a dozen mare for your eggs
than the market Price for practlrally the
year around, contact newt once regarding
The breeds we watt
APPLY: Box 12, 123 Eighteenth Street,
New Toronto, Ont.
HARNESS & COLLARS
Farmers Attention — Consult
your nearest Harness Shop
about Staco Harness Supplies.
We sell our goods only through
your local Staco Leather Goods
dealer. The goods are right,
and so are our prices. We
manufacture in our factories —
Harness Horse Collars, Sweat
Pads, Horse Blankets, and
Leather Travelling Goods. Insist
on Staco Brand Trade Marked
Goods and you get satisfaction.
Made only by
SAMUEL TREES CO„ LTD.
42 Wellington St. E„ Toronto
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE
fi;4NADA.;5 1 JNE,ST
elISA;ReEtTE
ISSUE 15 -- 1951