HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1951-4-18, Page 2I -low the 'New World'
Gat It's Name
Alnerign \respitesi, front whose
first name America ix derived, is
believed to hate been the first per•
son to refer to the dish discoverers
lams in the \Vesture Hemisphere
as the New World.
He made three t t!t dges to the
Western Hemisphere in the wake
of Columbus met l abut—in 1.199,
1500 and 1503. He wrote several
letters describing these trips at the
time or scent afterward, apll til
one addressed to Lorenzo de ;Medici
in 1503 be suggested that the ter.
ritories he had visited should be
called Mundus Novus, ratio for
"Nes) World." sicca they had not
before been ser.' by any other Euro-
pean. Columbus and Cabot both
died believing they haul visited the
eastern extremities of Asia, but
Vespucci lived to realize that the
lands they )rail discovered consti-
tuted a 'New World." lying be.
tween western Europe and eastern
Asia. I'p to that time uncertainty as
to the nature, location and extent '
of the newly discovered lands hall
delayed the application of any spe-
cific name to the entire Western
13emisphere
New World in the sense of the
Americas and Old- World in the
sense of Europe were not common
in English until the Eighteenth cen-
tury. In Elizabethan tines and long
afterward new world continued 'to
signify "modern times." and old
world '`ancient times," a figurative
sense the terms still retain. Chau-
cer mentioned the following "new-
'World
new-
tsorld neanners in their place," and
in Shakespeare's Richard II Fitz-
water says, "As I intended to thrive
hi this new world." In The Tem-
pest Shakespeare uses new world in
the sense of a personal discovery,
,4'Tiranda, whq had never before
seen any human being that she
,could distinctly remember except
her father, Calihan and Ferdinand,
exclaimed when she first saw the
Icing of Naples and his companions:
0, wonder!
How many goodly creatures are
there here!
How beauteous mankind is! 0
brave new world,
That has such people hit!
Antique world occurs in As You
Like It. In ICing John Cardinal
Pandulph, the Papal legate, says
to Lewis, the Dauphin of France:
"How green you are and fresh in
this old world." And in Sonnet 59
Shakespeare wrote:
That I night see what the old
world could say
To this composed wonder of your
frame.
In the King'. Message of Decem-
ber 12, 1825. Foreign Minister
George Cannier. alluding to his
part in promoting the :Monroe Doc-
trine and recognizing the independ-
ence of the Spanish temerican
peoples, said: "I called the New
World into existence to redtess the
balance of tete Old."—Front "A
Book About American history,"
by George Stimpson.
Now They Say Cows
AREN'T Contented
It is difficult to keep one's child-
hood illusions in a world character-
ized by swift change and peopled by
avid debunkers, but it is difficult to
avoid feeling more than the usual
degree of dismay over the latest
illusion to go—the one to tate effect
that cows as a class are contented
creatures,
Now that we are disilln.ioned, we
can see a dissatisfied glint in their
big brown eyes. Already it is be-
coming hard to understand how) we
could ever have been fooled by their
apparent placidity, their sedate cud -
chewing, and their readiness to give
their all when milking time arrives,
Cows. the California University
School of Agriculture now reveals,
are likely to be neurotic or even on
the psychotic' side. It seems that
each herd has a queen cow, a bossie
who bosses the others around. Site
may be contented, but the others
aren't, Social climbers all. they are
bitter and maladjusted. They brood,
they deliver less milk when they
And themselves unable to horn in
on the head cow.
This revelation of the scientists
at Davis—and they have made a
tremendous contribution to the
dairy industry of the nation—seems
to open a new field for veterinarians
specializing in bovine psychiatry,
The problem of finding an appro-
priate counterpart of the psychi-
atrist's couch mast be left to them,
along with the question of how to
sublimate the urge to become the
arbiter of bovine society.
Now that it has been brought up,
the prospect of psychiatrists for
S9ws leas an inevitability about it.
'or years the public has been re-
galed with articles bristling with
:figures on how much more the gov-
erntnent was spending to deal with
hog cholera, or to feed hormones
to pullets, than on coping with
human health and nutrition,
If appropriations to make cows
tontented are next on the agenda,
a new thought tet ruminate on will
be whether contentment artificially -
induced will be unaccompanied by
neurosis, "-- Saeramento (C a 1 i 1.)
Union,
THE .lLkulam �'
The talc of the 10011 known Its
"Johnny Apple. Cul" has been told
many times and in many forms,
Walt Lliency even devoted part of
one of Iii, pictures to Johnny's
doings. Naturally, a great deal of
legend has been built up around
the figure of the ratan who devoted
most of Ids life to providing apple
tree, for future generations destined
to live their lives in places where
there 51as little or no fruit.
e * Ne
Whether or not Jonathan Chap-
mtau—Johnny's real name—ever
visited Ontario is -1 believe—some-
what debatable. Some say he did—
others that he -neve cause this far
north. But every lover of apples—
and of genuinely tine characters—
will be interested, I believe, in
something about the actual Lean,
as reported recently in The New
York Times.
g ,k *
A hundred and fifty tears this
.April a stranger turned tip in Lick-
ing Spring, Ohio. Strangers were
scarce in Licking Spring, The only
white man living there looked
dosely at this one. He was 26,
tall, thin, black-eyed. Ile wore
homemade frontier -style clothing.
His name, he said, was Jonathan
Chapman and he had come West
from Massachusetts by way of
Pittsburgh, What he did at Lick-
ing Spring. Hurst have baffled its
only resident. Instead of staking
off a piece of land for himself,
Chapman hunted until Ise found a
small clearing. He tools apple seeds
from a loaded burlap bag and
planted them. He put a rough
fence around the plot and left Lick-
ing Spring as noiselessly as he had
come.
That was the first appearance in
American history of "Johnny Ap-
pleseed", a man more tenderly re-
membered in the years to follow
than any river -boat load of assort-
td politicians, generals and states-
*
mete
A few weeks laterJohnnyWas
seen on the Ohio with two boats
filled with appleseeds from the
cider presses in Pittsbutglt. There-
after his trail is not easy to fol-
low, He paddled,hit boat up White
Woman Creek, up the Licking
River, the Muskingum, the Mohi-
can and the Kokosing. He set out
his orchards at Steubenville and a
half hundred other places in Ohio,
Indiana and Michigan. Wherever
apples bloomed fresh in the wilder-
ness a man could say for sure that
Johnny had been there. Sometimes
he returned to his plantings for
seedlings to set elsewhere; as often,
he did not. He left his nurseries
behind in the hope that the set-
tlers might realize what beauty
and riches he had planted for then.
and care for them as he slid, states
a writer in The New York Times.
A hundred small towns knew
hien, but they knew as little of his
coining and going as of the birds
of spring and autumn. They knew
hint as a religious zealot but one
who lived his religion far more
more than he talked it. The main
drive of his life was selflessness;
he had set out to plant apples be-
cause, back East, he had heard that
Ohio apples were dying and he
felt called to replant them, that
the settlers Wright eat the fruit and
be spared the scurvy. Itis way of
life and his work made hint a leg-
end among the simple people of
his day and long before he died.
Ina land that was hard and where
life was hard, his disinterest in
the things that concerned most
men brought hint the great love
that outlasted his Life. He died in
1845, near Fort Wayne, Ind., after
catching cold while inspecting one
of his nurseries.
After his death kthe legends
about him grew like one of his own
trees. Men told of his ways with
the Indians, of their friendship
Stan's Stance—St. Louis Cardinals' Stan Musial has only a
slightly different stance on the golf course from the one he has
on the baseball diamond. However, 'from the position at left,
he collects only birdies, while the stance at right brings him,
about$75,000 a year. Ile has won the National League batting
championship four times, a record for lefties.
for him and their trust and of the
times Johnny had dealt with them
alone and unafraid, Another man
told how he had seen Johnny play -
with bear cubs while the mother
bear watched without concern:
few humans have walked this earth
who could do that, Others told
how Johnny would teat no meat,
carry no gutn, how he would) give
the clothes from his back 'to any
man who needed them, how, he
would walk the winter woods
barefoot, how he would ask a
simple meal at a cabin door and
pay for it with appletrees, bow
he asked to sleep the night on a
cabin floor and was gone long be-
fore his hosts awoke.
a 5 k
The men of Itis day who sought
and gained wealth, power and pres-
tige are long forgotten, Still re-
membered, as fresh as Ohio apple
blossoms, is the simple matt who
took no care for the things of the
morrow as he walked through early
American history and brushed
dose to people's hearts. Perhaps
is was because, after all, wealth
and power and prestige may not
be so hard to achieve; many a ratan
gets then. Johnny Appleseed
aimed at something much 'tougher:
to leave the world a more neigh-
borly place than he found it.
Hanging in the late Charlie Quer-
rie's office in the Toronto theatre
he used to manage, there hung a
very striking sports picture. (It
may be there yet, for all we know.)
This picture showed the crowd
which attended a field lacrosse
game at I1anlan's Point, between
the Torontos and the Tecumsehs.
e 0 m
When anybody asked Querrie
who won that game he would reply,
"We did"—the "we" meaning the
Tecumsehs. Then he would go on
to explain: "1)5 course, the 'Toronto's
happened to outscore ns—BUT IT
WAS OUR HOME GATE." Then
he would grin.
r 4 e
For that gate was a juicy One,
snake no mistake about that, be-
cause the crowd shown in that
picture was huge for those long -
ago days. In fact, it would be a
really sizeable crowd even today.
And we sincerely believe that mod-
ern hockey magnates and promoters,
especially those pushing the "ama-
teur" brand of hockey, would do
well to study that picture and con-
sider the lesson it tells.
Ho
6Y -
HAROLD
ARNETT
'CRUSH TRAY MAKE TRAY FOR PAINT BRUSHES
13Y CUTTING MOTOR OIL CAN TO PROVIDE ATROUGH
AND SIDE FLAP. LATTER 15 BENT TO MAKE A LEG,
CAUSING'. TRAY TO SLANT.
Field .lacrosse, once by far
Canaba's.biggest crowd pleaser and
draw,` has long since passed into
the limbo of almost forgotten things.
The principal. reason for its de-
mise, in the opinion of those best
fitted to pass one, was too much
unnecessary roughness, too much
pandering to the tastes of those
who like to see the blood flow.
Decent people began staying away
from lacrosse in droves and the
end was not far off. And there are
plenty who think that if hockey
doesn't soon cleats house, some-
thing similar will happen to it.
* k 5
From the leading editorial in a
recent issue of The Toronto Daily
Star we quote as follows:
5 5 5
Professional hocltey shows little
indication that it has taken suffi-
ciently to heart the public reaction
against the brutality of the play-
off games. The people and news-
paper press of Ontario, if the signs
are not misleading, feel that hockey
has been getting out of control in
a way that encourages brutality
instead of speedy skating, skilful
stick -handling and combination
play. Excessive roughness and dis-
regard of the spirit of true sports-
manship are certain to ruin hockey
as a game and as the commercial
proposition which it has become.
* 5 5
Ottawa, St. Thomas and Toronto
newspapers are among those that
have sounded warnings against ex-
isting tendencies. Gordon Sinclair
has gone on ,the air to condemn the
conduct of hockey rowdies. He has
named one player as deserving
banishment from the game.
:k N 5
In a story of Friday night's play-
off game in Detroit, a Toronto
newspaper reports that Dick Irvin,
the Montreal coach, said the punch
that Maurice Richard, 'The Rocket,'
landed on the face of Ted Lindsay
of Detroit near the end of the first
period was the turning point in the
ganle, Dick Irvin is quoted as say-
ing: "When Richard threw the
punch, Lindsay went down and it
took all the fight out of the Red
Wings."
:5 fi
Allowing for the boastfulness of
some hockey coaches, it still seems
obvious that a remark of that kind
is more likely to encourage rough
and illegal play than to discourage
it. Richard received a seven -minute
penalty but apparently his team
and coach felt that the punch did
the trick and that that was all that
mattered.
k *
Many persons cannot escape the
feeling that coaches and manage-
ments nest shoulder a heavy bur-
den of responsibility for the increas-
ing roughness of hockey. This, if
it is not checked, may lead to
players being killed on the ice.
t k
*
The most regrettable feature of
the whole hockey situation is that
the same tactics and the same wrong
ideas that are spoiling the pro-
fessional game are being carried
down into the junior OHA, which
no longer is an amateur organiza-
tion. Once upon a time the OHA
was the pride of Ontario as an ex-
ample of true sportsmanship and
true amateurism.
5 * 5
Junior hockey teams are being
subsidized today by NHL teams.
The style of play in the big league
is being copied by the juniors. The
players main ambition 1s to show
ouch qualities that they will catch
the eye of those who run the big
league. From what they read about
the NHL play-offs, if not from what
their coaches tell them, they con-
clude that they have to be rough,
tough and nasty if they hope ever
to star in professional hockey.
In Friday night's junior game
between Barrie and the Toronto
Marlboros, a total of 18 penalties
were incurred, The Marlboros ac-
counted for 13 of the penalties, One
player, found guilty of hooking,
tried to trip the referee and was
given a 10 -minute misconduct pen-
alty. Another player served five
minutes for rough playing and
two went off for fighting.
There are those who say that the
fans like rough stuff. Too many of
them do. Any battle with sticks can
be dramatic and exxciting. But that
does not make it worthy of Canada
or something that can be dignified
with the name of sportsmanship,..
k• N
If Ontario citizens who love the
thrills of hard, clean hockey insist
on getting that and nothing else,
and enlist the support of some of
the more reasonable men and good
citizens who sponsor professional
hockey, the game can once more
become the pride of all—Canada's
, national winter game.
:t
We, personally, agree with every
word of the above, and to those
who say that today's hockey fan
demands the rough -and -tough stuff,
and that hockey can't live without
it, we would add this, Frank "Xing"
Clancy stated that the final play -
down game between Canadiens and
Detroit Red Wings was the finest
hockey match he ever witnessed.
King Clancy is no sissy. If there
was a fight on the ice, in his play-
ing days, he was in the thick of it
—generally on the bottom of the
pile-up. IIis experience as a player,
referee and observer is vast. When
he puts a hockey game away as the
"finest ever" you may take it that
it was something worth travelling
many miles to see, YET THAT
PARTICULAR GAME WAS
PLAYED WITHOUT A SINGLE
PENALTY BEING CALLED.
Crawling Around For
100 Million Years
',What creature from the myriad
species found in the animal and in-
sect world will serrit'e longest on
earth?
The scientists have put their
money on the cockroach.
They have discovered that it has
already survived longer than any
other known creature, past or pres-
ent.
It has been crawling around the
earth for over 100 million years,
whereas Alan's ancestors can only
be traced back a,mere million.
During that time the cockroach
has learned much about the art of
survival in uncertain circumstances.
He has watched the giant dinosaurs
come and go — the sabre-toothed
tigers, the woolly ma)ntnoths,
His body has enabled him to live
on; reproducing himself without
change through all those millions of
years.
Eats His Own Skin
One of his secrets is that he eau
live without some of the vitamins
absolutely essential to life for most
other creatures, He eats almost any-
thing, including his ow=n sited skin.
His body is sensitive to light. De-
prived of his eyes he still slithers
for cover wizen lights go on. His
armour protects him so well that
he can be trodden on without com-
ing to much harm.
We may well wonder how it is
that Alan, whose survival qualities
are so much louver than those of the
cockroach, has nevertheless man-
aged to assume such a dominant
position on earth in such a short
time,
Each species of animal has scute
special equipment of its own that
mattes it methods of survival differ-
ent from those of all others, Some
animals can'hear many sounds in-
audible to Malt, for instance.
Longest In Queue
Others can see touch better,
Others can run faster or jump far -
titer, or go longer without food or
water. Some, by clever camouflage,
can blend with their backgrounds.
In all of these fields and many
others Man is very poorly equip-
ped. Everything he has, except one
thing, is outclassed in many other
species. The only instance in which
Man shows a superior development
is his brain.
Only by its use has Mau conte
so far and so fast. Only Man's
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DYEING AND CLI'OA NIN(1
HAVE you anYthltla nee= dyeing or clean-
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are glad to anewor your question. Do.
partment ti. Parker's On Wnrlte LImttud,
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GIIR SALE
POOLTS — Hatching 10gge from Broad
Breasted Bronze 001105mm clean stook.
Started poults and sexed toms also avail-
able. S. W. Baker, Rat, 1, Westboro, Ont,
COMPL.ETe plumbing and healing shop
with or without tools and stook. In the
village of Crysler. ADp1Y A. 1. Slate, 607
William SL, London, Ont.
80 COLONIES Italian Bees, 10 frame
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now extractor tanks. Bargain, tor quick
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CLINTON and Beaver Oats, No Harbert
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send for sample. Charlie Adana, n. 0,
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FIND Bidden Treasures, I010etelcal Metal
Detectors for Cold or Silver — Bolger
counters for Uranium—information )Free.
Television Laboratories, Box 172, Kingston
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YHO'rOURAPIiII, cards, etc., pre.ereed by
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Novelty, Box 616, Winnipeg,
STOCK{ of dairy farm,100 urian, with
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River rens through pl'0pg'11', on paved
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CTS—CLONE—Drilling Machine, complete, on '
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Write for prices: Bruce 010101',, %Valker-
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SE9".CING hens. Will puy express 1.100
Richmond H111. W. Heontcote, Dox 76,
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--- 17121,1' W,tN'1`F,D
COUPI.h — ttm'denor-handyman with wife
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power to think and reason puts hint
and keeps hint at the head of the
procession 011 earth.
There are plenty of other creatur-
es waiting to take his place. And
the one which has been longest in
the queue is the cockroach,
TOO BAD!
Ater twenty years' absence a
lean returned to his house town. •
He discovered only one of the or'i-
genal residents, an old Irishwotman,
"Tell me, Mrs, Daly," he said,
"what became of poor little Jimmy
?olcKcnna?"
"Poor!" echoed Mrs, Daly, "Poor
•uothin'. Jimmy had no schoolin',
but he grew up to stake a fortune,
although he couldn't read or write,"
"And where is he now?"
"I couldn't say. You see, about
two years ago he went down to the
pool where some of ethe boy's was
swvinunfll', dud' it bein' a wvarm•day
lie took off his clothes an' was
drowtud."
"Too bad," said the visitor, "To
think of a boy like that corning to
such an end. And he, made a -for-
tune, you say? Yet he couldn't read
or wvrite."
•'No," said Mrs, Daly. "Nor
swim."
11f IIIrat.
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07 Frederick Street • ftllebener, Ontario,
NURSERY 5'!'0010
P'501T noes. small fruits. Soano trees,
Evergreens, Shrubs, Roaes. A11 leading
vat•letics, at right prices. Send today for
free catalogue. Central Nurseries Limited,
A, G, Hu11 & Son, St. Cathartnce, Ont.
STRAWBERRY PLANTS
"Kellogg -Premier"; "Valentine"; Faire
fax"; 'Senator -Dunlop." (12,00 thousand:
02.00 hundred. Cleaned. Trimmed. Disease
P'reo, True to name, Mono' order. please,
Ross Carroll, Norwich, Ontario.
ORDER NOW FOR SPRING DELIVERY
—Chinese Elm 19 Inch etas 100 for
10.99; Dwarf Apple Trees (Macintosh or
Spy or Cortland); Dwarf Pear Trees (Bart-
lett or Clapp's Favorite) 8-10. 01ze, your
choice, 53.00 each or 8 for 07.801 Hardy
21 for $9,08; Giant Exhibition Pavony
Privet fledging plant, 12 to 18 lnoh size.
Emote In red. white or pints 8 for 11.85.
Plum tree,, sweet eating Burbank, Lom-
bard or Grand Duke, 5 -ft. size 12.00 eaelr
or 8 for 10,00. Free Colored Garden
Guide with Every Order. Brookdale —
Kln0sway Nurseries, BowmanVllle. Ont.
CARRelNG,5Xe\ 30 inches 04.00; 20 inches
12,60; 11 Inches 12.60 Per tun. Cramer
Nurseries, Mite 1+'0x, Seek.
PATENTS
AN OPFER to every Invontur—List of In.
=Mime and full information Bent free.
The Ramsay Co., Registered Patent Alto:,
neve, 273 Bank Street. Ottawa.
GETHERSTONHAUGH & Company, Pa-
tent Solieltore, established 1990, See
Bay Street, Toronto. 13nokiet et Informa-
tion on 1•eque0t.
RYA MPS
DO you collect stamps? Send for selection
on approval; Canada or other countries;
Prices low. Elkins, St. James, Niagara
Palls, Ontario,
STAMPS BOUGHT AND SOLD
SETS, singles, packets, Want lists filled
new Is,lues, Albums and supplies, Ottawa
Stamp Shop. 101 Queen Street, Ottawa.
0A 411101)
CHILDREN'S nurse with references. Write
Mrs. 0. H. Barrett, 0 Alexandra lid.,
Gait, Ont.
WA24't10D floats to supply us with hatch.
Ins eggs for 1921 eoneon, On some breeds
we can take eggs practically the year
around. If you would like anywhere from
150 to 250 a dozen more for your eggs
than the market price for practically the
year around, contact ue at once regarding
the breeds wo want,
APPLY; Box 12, 123 Eighteenth Street,
New Toronto, Ont.
'NY SUFFER PILES
Gratolul nsers 1'001,,0 quirk results, Relief from
Pain—end soothing comfort—frons \)toes Pile
Remedies. Two kinds—Number 1 for protrud-
ing Piles. Sold in tube with perforated pipe for
internal application, 75c. Number 3 fur external
Piles. Sold in ,la', 750. Order by number from
your Druggist.
MECCA PILE REMEDIES
Hai
f
'
calp—
La
Try This Nome Treatment
For Quick Ease and Comfort
Iroro Is a clean powerful penetrating
mil that brings speedy relief from tho
Itching tortm•o and discomfort.
Dort dig with fingernails, that only .
001•,00 to epl'entl the trouble. Just Use
equal parte of Moo,,o's Emorald Ott and
olive Oil, Apply gently with the finger.
0yolIittheltetool11, 'You'll fnditrament ifny
soothes 1110 Itching and torture but helps
promote more rapid healing—)nose float-
ing dandruff becomes a thing at the past.
Scalp Mears up and hair begins to thicken.
You can obtain Emerald 011 In the
original bottle wherever drugs are sold.
ISSUE 16 - 1951
When rheumatic pain
gets you clown, here's the . /
quick way to get relief. ,..//"
Rub in soothing Minard's z//
Liniment. Is it good? .lust . /
try it, i'Ohl sec!
RIR 'MA'T
PAIN?
:.51