= Pe a, Nl a waste RE SE SRR 0: ae ib ~ Sa a, NE | h a "old man" head when you solicit a what became of the Doe world, 1s champion, "At 17 "Soa a nervous breakdown "alcott, {| 'now 45. years old. And , came back to iy, Xd his "in his forties, W too, could beat practically courts. And little Aurel A . ; EE SE, Barve fe Samarra Re Te Tae Adage "Youth Will Be Served * Doesn't Always Apply In Sport f ; £/ he 7 ; a ® Don't let that old man with the hour glass get on your nerves. Anytime you begin to feel that the yeats may be catchin with you, or even passing you, thin v Willie Hoppe, who won another tink | champlonship the other day, : . Maybe a ball player or fights is: an at 3. One upon a time a track athlete { 30 was a miracle. You may be greeted with a negatlve shake: of the Jor at the age of 40, Doc Osler (Wonder: ) wanted to, chloroform us all at 60. 'But don't let such gloomy thoughts depress you. Sport, which is one of the common denominators of. our life and times, points a few examples to prove that-middle age isn't necessarily" tha end of everything. And we think Willie Hoppe, king of the billiards one of the most notable of these. « ° Willie started his career away back in the nineties, which were not necessarily gay. He was then a lad in short trousers. He was so tiny he had to stand on a box-to cue the. ball while - playing, so they called him "The Soap.Box Champion." : "Even then his father, who was coaching him, had big ings _in-view. And he had a fine subject to work with, because Willie took orders like a soldier, He had a genius for hard practice. And the result began to bear rich fruit at an early age, 1s They took Hoppe to France, where balkline billiards was at . its peak, They had "academies" where fans wagered freely on 'cue matches. And great men played-in them. One was Vignaux, the Hoppe' defeated . Vign champion, And thereafter he became such of his craft that he remained champion - for 17 Box Champion" he became * "his sixties, he's still champion at his _trade,-after recovering from that threatened to end his playing 'career, It took two "or_three years to cure it, . $0, as we said, don't let the Years get you Fg We coud waile into the statistics to-show you that Clarence DeMar was a marathon champion in his forties; that Bob Fitzsimmons was still world 'heavyweight boxing champion at 36, and- that Jersey -Joe the present champion, according to some Testinteg, is hen there was Bill Cook, surviving a couple of years Sampaigning on other war iro ockey stick with New York Rangers and, n--recognition as one of hockey's great right wings of all time, And there was Big Bill Tilden who, in_ his forties all the 'younger stars on. the tennis ollat, who played hockey for" 17 con- "secutive> seasons with Canadiens, and. Eugéne. Tremblay, | the greatestawrestler Canada ever produced, who in his. fi tes was "almost unbeatable among the lightweights. : - 8q don't let the years get you down. A lot of folk "have been able to rise above 'the shadows of Time. 2 . survived "He became world "outstanding exponent . | years,. From the ' 'The Boy Wonder." Now, in World. War I, and onts after that, who ' obably In a recent issue of LL 00K there was an article written by Rogers 2Cobb, published in an earlier issue of the same maggzine. Cobb -had said that modern modern ball players, with few ex- _septions--had slumped in quality : King," eonsiderably "since his day. * * * Mr. Hornsby proceeded to rip A Sait C Hornsby in reply to a piece by Ty "baseball--and Cobb fsom stem to gudgeon, what- ~ ever that mcans. He not only inti- mated that Tyrus Raymond didn't know what he was talking about. He also said that -he--Hornsby-- wouldn't rate thie Georgia Peach as better than "sixth on a list of all- time all-star outfielders. > * * * We were just. about to. sit down' and beat out a column hinting that Melon King--Albert Ray, ¢ "been juggling melons on his head during 40 years 'of danc- Ing. Dubbed the * "Watermelon Ray says he's dropped his "crown," since he substituted a watermelon for a 5 pumpkin, < ew \ ; i 64, has never " No Loiceny Today--Outfielder Hank Bauer of-the New York Yank- ges is out at second on an attempted steal. Johnny Pesky, Tigers' shortstop, applied the tag after taking peg from catcher Joe Ginsberg. Ump is Scotty Robb. Te But Cobb was overwhelming n what Eddie Stanky once des- 'cribed as "the intangibles." : * * -- The major.leagues probably never had a fiercer competitor or a smart- ~ er one than Tyrus Raymond Cobb. This reporter's favorite story:is one ' uncovered by Tom Meany. It's so filustrative of Cobb's temperament that it stands repeating, "Fhe Geor- -gia Peach was an eager and rest- lessly ambitious minor leaguer then playing - f6r Augusta in the Sally League. He roomed 'with Nap Rucker, the pitcher, and it was their 1° habit to dress and undress in their rooming - house, 3 * » o* One day Rucker was knocked out of the box and already was in 'the tub for a leisurely bath when he heard, Cobb dash into their bed- room. Never. before 'had: Rucker beaten Cobb to the tub. He could hear Ty pacing back and forth like a caged tiger. as he snapped tartly at Nap for his slowness. The pit- * Cobb's brain was "generating on "all cylinders every instant he was- in a ball game. He never-stopped thinking. Often he'd be thrawn ott on what looked to. be needlessly foolish base-running gambles, _but there was a motive behind every - © such move, The artful Cohb 'was 'plotting. "He'd try for that extra base to test a throwing arm or the way the fielder made a tag. This would be done in a lopsided game so that Cobb would have the solu- tion ready. for the 1-Q game. ie * * * 4 4 * . For instance,- he 'made a- habit of overrunning third base in order to force a throw from the slick- fielding Hal Chase.-A--pattern thus was 'established, so one day he thundered inte third from second and , Chasc 'made the throw. The third baseman swooped down his glove for-the tag. However, Cobb was on his way home with the winning run. Only Cobb could score regularly from second on au infield out. ca RR Message of the Drums Wid the. King di the natives of ie Africa were - discussing his-death in their kraals before the local district officer heard the news. 2 It was the same wheh King George V died. It has beens the ~_|+-same on the Dark "Continent. for. centuries, the deep throbbing notes: of 'the jungle drums sending t eir "message of sadness; joy and dan ger along the jungle paths. - When.Gordon died: at Khartoum A on January 26th;, 1885, the bazaars of "Mombasa, two thousand- miles - away, buzzed with thé news the following day. Though the drum = have fallen into disuse in villages near the: "white man's cities and towns, they . "are stil] the jungle wireless in re+ mote areas, and, modern travellers still find, as did Livingstone, that '"as soon as one leaves a kraal the 'drums begin té-'talk.'" The beat of the drums is not - a jungle code or a jumble of noise . UYEINU AND CLEANING HAVE you anything needs dyeing or cléan- ing? Write to, us for Information We" are glad to answer your questions. De- partment H._ Parker's De Works Limited, * 791 Yonge 8t, Toronto. BE BURE the chfcks you pur for sarily | Irs Proven--every sufferer of Rheumatic: summer broodipg Inherit high egg pro- | auction unites T1t Ia seus that pay the Pains' or Neuriti¢ - should fry. Dixon's . feed bill and make the profit. At'no extra Remedy. cost .you can get Tweddle High Quality MUNRO'S oRUG STORE chicks" with lots of R.O.P. breeding back 335 Elgin Oitawe of them. Reduced prices for June and 9 Howl July, 4000 R.O.P, cockerals used In our $1.25 Express Prepaid -nbreeding pens. Also started chicks, started ° " turkeys, older pullets, special broller TOBACCO ELIMINATOR > . chicks, turkey poults. Catalogue,. Prompt A sclentific remedy for Cigarette Addie- "delivery. tion. + For free booklet; write Hing = TWEDDLE: CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. Pharmacal . Corp. Ltd, (Alberta), Box : Fergus w JQntarlo | 673, London, Ont. © 'WHY WAIT, quder now--Pullets--ship. s AST » Co? Aper's choice breeds, heavy bres WHY "suffer if there is ething that will Week '$28.00; 4 week 330.30. Medius' . 3 HA SRR i Ar IE "week $34.90; 4 week $38.90. For ¥ouf fy. 0 Theen gold on a money. back' guar one fon Brey ask us. Dayolds fn. mixed, .antee. So easy to use. After your eymp- . pullets.~ Bray Hatchery, 1200 John No. tons have: been diagnosed as Asthma, you Hamilton. : owe -it to" yourself to -tr¥ Astbmanetria. CABINS Ask your Druggist. : "EQUIPPED housekeeping cabins, ~ $35.00 © ® FEMINEX © per week. Nipissing District. Grand [] as wisn, tells agother. Take suparior "= Sabin. Sliver Dawm-Gamp, Monetville, INEX" to help alleviate pain, dis- Ontarfo. i= : trem dai) nervous tension assoclated with monthly periods. $5.00 Postpald In plain wrapper. "POST'S CHEMICALS ; . TORONTO 880 QUEEN ST. BAST POSTS ECZEMA SALVE" BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. Post's Eczema reflecting various moods, They FARMS FOR SALE "Saive wil Bat dlappoint You. Coins actually talk words. b imitating ROCKVILLE district -- 100 acre farm ringworm, pimples and athlete's foot, wil} ¥ ¥ Jush : d T x reapond readily to the etainless odorless the sounds of the Human voice. ig Arey ah Jemainder §ood york An rdloas rot a bor of A "male" drum- is tuned to Te- borders Graham Lake: .possibilities for hopeless pli i $5.80 - PER JAR . cottages; 8-room frame, brick lined house, flect the low notes, while a »|- 30° feet off road: heavy duty wiring POST'S" REMEDIES 'remale drum mimics the higher downstairs recently redecorated: central 'Bent Post: Free on Receipt of Price "tones locgtion. $3,000 cash, Apply Mrs. Florence all Queen-- St 8 Cornet of Logan, * Ea "Beath, RR4, Mallorytown, Ont. 2 & " Taronio 3 = The ardor drums of the kraals' poe rr transform the syllables of 'the 23 FUR BALE MEN AND WOMEN tribes' languages, and there may JUNE, the best month to get turkeys-for be a hundred such: syllables. But the skilled .drummer "can in- troduce variations. for his. drum' by the addition of "tuners." He may -} "add pieces of wax or rubber to the" ~ drumhead, and bells or rings. in- -side the drum. Special drumsticks made "from different kinds of wood also increase the repertoire of notes. - When a shigle drum is used the hide is stretched over the drum-head to ensure different tones at dif- - ferent. points. : But the most amazing drums of all are those uséd by. some tribes inthe Belgian Congo. They use a- basic 'jungle language of .only two tones, which are made by cut- ting the wood thicker on one side. But as different words may liave the same tomés -the drummers * have to memorize a wide range of descriptive phrases. So .instead of | _Average Man Is a Dummy The perfect "Average Man" doesn't exist, but Ford Motor bd bl 2k "Hornstrrhat with that St. Louis" heat and one thing _or. another-- must-have blown his top, but good, to talk or write such nonsense. But before we got araund to" doing "sos the roof fell in on The Rajah; in fact _he was fired from his job _as St. Louis Browns' manager. just "about--the time his magazine blast Tat Cobb hit the newsstands. * * * 3 So we thought to ourself, "What the heck's the use of. kicking a man |~ Fil when he's down? and didn't write said. column. : ERE + * * Arthur. Daley of The New York Times apparently had similar thoughts regarding "lornsby,' the only difference. being that=he went ahead and wrote his piece." He also said what we had in mind so much "better "than we could hope to do that from here on we are letting Mr. Daley take over, with nrany thanks for the assist on a day so warm that even just banging a type- writer with two fingers is a real chere. Almost as much of a chore as it is in any-other kind of wea- ther. Come in, Mw Daley. 5 * * * Rogers Hornsby is having trouble enotigh these days. Yet it is impos-- sible to leave unchallenged one ridi= culous 'statement he madé in a ma- gazine rebuttal to Ty Cobb's ori- inal blast against the modern' ball players. The Rajah destroyed. the efficacy of his 'arguments by "the malicioiis way he omitted the Geor- gia Peach from his All-Star tea. Named in the outfield were Shoe- less Joe Jackson, Tris Speaker-and Babe Ruth with. Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams also ranked ahead of Cobb. v. * * - \ . . \ h > : The 'easiest way to answer that _ silly estimate is to point td the re- cord book. Cobb practically owns it. He has the highest. lifetime ave- rage in the history. pf the game, a breath-taking .367. He won the American League batting cham- pionship twelve times in thirteen years. For twenty-three consecu- dive years he hit over .300, thrice soaring over 400. He had the most times at bat, ruins, hits, stolen bases } and sundry other items, * » + Does - "that sound like the No. Six outfielder? Let's look over the other five men, Ruth was a better distance. slugger; Speaker . and DiMaggio were slicker fielders, and both Jackson: ind Williams were * 'more gifted natural stylists at the Company --=--engineers have designed a - dummy, from" * Army. physical records, that has the "average ~=man's" dimensions. Weighing 164% pounds, 5 feet, 9 inches "high, Mr. AM isusedto ~~ B determine interior auto dimensions. iy cher answered flippantly. Sudden- ly Cobb burst into the bathroom: and savagely grasped Rucker by the throat. "Have you gone crazy?" gasped Rucker after fighting him off. "Nap, you just don't understand," said Cobb despairingly. The blood drained froni his face as-the satanic gléam faded from his eye. "I've just gotta be first--all the. tinte." That's the way he played baseball too. ' : - * * * From - a- purely physical stand-* point Cobb's greatest gift was his speed of foot. his career in the era of the dead ball when one run often_was the only run of the ball game, Ty had nonce of the butting grace of 'Horns- by's five candidates, smarter hitter than all of them com- bined. : . * * £] He" spaced his hands on the bat, using a choked grip. ThE he punched the ball, placing every shot with artful cise. Deep-fieJding play- ers invited him' to bunt. So he did. If they played him tight, he aimed for the holes to cither side, On top of all thatewas lis frightening speed that madg. every throw a hurried one. That always was his primary idea, to 'keep releitless pressure applied gyery where. a * He played ; with brains as well as brawn. When Walter Johnson went up to the majors, no pne could hit his blinding speed, including Cobh. Then Ty learned that the Big Train had a dr a batter with his fi . I'S "It was a shameless thing to do," Cobb sheepishly confessed to me a few years ago, "but I took ad- vantage of Walter's gentle nature. I knew he wouldn't bean me, and so 1 crowded the plate, forcing him to pitch where | wanted him to pitch. Soon 1 was hitting him as if I owned him." eball: * } How he capitalized | on itl He performed for most of but he- was a, d of killing © open Any time Cobb- got on a base a mass case of the jitters would descend on the enemy team. He drove everyone crazy. There is just no-way of estimating the number of games he. won by his very presence on the diamond: * * * As a Jitter he had no equal. Nor did "he have one as a base- . stealer, since the swift Georgian stole a record total of 892 bases, including 96 in onc season. As an outfielder he was good without be- ing great, definitely not so adroit as Speaker-or DiMaggio, probably -tiot so good as Ruth, but superior to Williams and Jackson. = And Hornsby names him No. Six! ° : Got A 700 Year's Job Lucky is the man, especially if he works for himself, who has enough raw materials to enablz him to car- ry on for the rest of his life." But there is one man living near Mob- berley, No¥th: Cheshire, who has enough material for 709 yeas. He sells block of peat, that black, aromatic, slow-burning stuff which as vel is unrational, It burns in hearths and wrought-iron cradles, glowing red and giving.out an inttense, uniform heat, In such parts of England as peat can be obtained, it is sold for 3d. a block, but in North Cheshire this owner of a private bog sells it at 8 shillings for 100 blocks. And he could get rid of a million blocks if he had them ready, so great is -the, demand." Each block is 9 by 7 by 3 inches, and when freshly cut holds about 7 1b. of water, They have'to be dried in the open, and either frosty or- sunny weather is the best for drying. Some of the peat is made into firglighters by treating it with oil and cufting And pressing into suitable blocks, 3 risking confiision by saying "It is © going to rain," they may 'drum out, "Badman, son of disease, is "coming down on clods of earth." "The chief's drummer "usually be- gins with his own call-sign repeat- "ed two or three times. The follows the call-sign of the headman to whom the chief: wishes . to speak. : ; On racknowledgment, their bus- iness--then--follows;~and--a-series--of+ beats on 'a low: note ends the message. ' Tor those Jes who the chief's: .messiage the=~ eal penalty demanded by "the chief i carried out--"Qff witli" his ears". But the drums are not used solely for the transmission of news, They have a communal purpose, too. When the natives, under state sup- - ervision, are building bridges and roads, a drummer is. constantly playing his accompaniment" to the shouting and singing of the work- ers "When "epidemics rage ry drums play for hours, 'beating ott the ap- peal of the jungle people: "Disease, "go down river." Beetle Rescues A -$100,000,000 Crop Appearing suddenly . overnight; "vast numbers of ladybirds have saved the farmers' crops of peanuts ine the. Vaal-Hartz settlement in Andalusia, Transvaal. The crops were 'being devoured by the aphis and farmers had tried every means of wiping it out, but the leaves con- 'tinued to wilt before their eyes. Frantic appeals were sent to Pre- toria and a special powder poison was dispatched to the scttlement. But before it could reach the far- mers, along came the ladybirds. -Nature had stepped in, Their lar- vac speckied the peanut plants white and massacred the. deadly deadly aphis, saving the crops front in. 4 Said one faymer: "But for the ladybirds' timely . arrival, 15,000 tons of shelled nuts--about 25 per cent. of South Africa's total out- pat--would: have been lost. It was like a aniracle."" No wonder the >} childresi™ of » Vaal-Hartz are now ladybird "factory" in West London had battalions of ladybirds, number- ing at least 500,000, ready in the spring to' fight the aphis which also attacks rambler roses, carnations . and other plants... Two-spotted ladybirds "were most effective in saving the gardeners' crops which | were being attacked by myriads of "blight." They were particularly useful when spraying was cither undesirable or unsuccessful, Ladybirds were once flown 14, 000 miles to 'save Hawaii's pine- apples from a plague of mealybugs which threatened to destroy them. These little, red and black-spotted . insects have also been used to re- pel the mealybug's attacks on cof- fee plants in, Kenya. "When. the -$100,000,000 a year orange growing industry in Cali. fornia was threatened by cottony A ___KITCHEN_SINES - BATHROOM SETS | miss | singing: "Ladybird, ladybird, don't' | fly away home"! : - } Before the war Britain's only , the Christmas market, Tweddle fast maturivg turkeys, reach maturity' in: 22 to. 25 weeks, so why take them e€arlier than June for Christmas. Our Broad. Breasted Bronze: are really hard to beat. 'They are" short legged, thick- thighs and heavy broad breasts. If you want the' best, purchase Tweddle poults this year, Alsq Broad -Bréasted .White Holland, Nebraskan, Beltsville White, Nebraskan X* Broad Breasted Bronze, non-sexed, sexed hens, sexed toms. -- Fred "turkey 'gulde. Prompt delivery. Also started turkeys, all, from Canadian « Approved, i pullorum clean flocks. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. 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