spr ee ems NS RA Sa Ce Cn a cfezsnre ® Hockey has. faded now into that past which envelopes sports events so rapidly, as seasons overlap, with hockey intruding on football, baseball pushing its way in on hockey, The cheering is a distant echo, the cups have been won and lost, individual ; : feats are entered in the records. "There's an award for almost every individual performance in the major hockey of today, a great many too in the lesser leagues, which is the way it should be. When athletes can rise above the level, and soar to greatness by their own skill and "courage and spirit! it's only fair and just that this should be recognized in some tangible fashion. Unfortunately for one player in the National Hockey-lLeague,. who did all this, plus, there is no award for a courageous come- back, not even a special notation in the records, whicli are coldly mathematical, and don't delve into thethuman side. Yet, if any player deserved some recognition that would entitle him to special notation, special award, that player who should have been worthy in large and generous measure of sucf recognition 'would have been Winnipeg's Samuel James "Sugar Jim" Henry, goaler of the Boston Bruins, who survived the buffeting of Fate, survived a fire that scarred his hands and arms, and returned to stardom. Hockey developed some great figures the past season, but . we doubt if any of these is so compelling, so fraught with the rugged romance of sport as the return of Henry to the Big Time. This is pure Hollywood throughout the picce. A high voltage script-writer could pen no more gripping drama. ; Jim Henry first won a spot in the major league with New York Rangers, in 1941. But his stay end of his first season, he enlisted in the Army to serve in World War II, remained there until the end of the fighting. Then he returned to hockey, played briefly with Rangers, after which his sports pathway was a dizzy zig-zag lane that seemed to be leading nowhere. Twice he came up to Rangers, alternating with minor league chores. Then to Chicago in the Big Time, then suddenly back to the minors, for three seasons. This isn't offered as a history of Henry's hockey meanderings. . We merely paint it in for background, to prove that, despite .vicissitudes, real courage doesn't weaken. Three years in the minors was bad enough, but the worst came in the summer of 1951, A flash fire suddenly enmeshed Henry at 'a summer resort camp, he was badly burned about the hands and arms. That, you might think, would spell the end of a career in hockey, where hands with speed and certainty are, for goalers, almost as essential as lightning reflexes, But Henry didn't give up. He reported to the Detroit camp of the Red Wings, for he had played the previous season for Indianapolis, a Detroit farm team. But Indianapolis already had a good goaler, young Hall, so the chances for Henry with his burned hands remaining even in minor hockey looked slim. But Boston Bruins of the National League needed a goaler. They tried to buy Hal], but, against their own judgment, were talked into purchasing Sugar Jim Henry, for a moderate sum. The club started poorly. Boston didn't win a game in. its first ten, Henry's job seemed shaky. Then the team improved, but near the end, seemed to have little chance to make the play-offs for the Stanley Cup. But near the end of the race, Bruins started to roll. They won or tied all but two of the last 12. And the star, the steadying influence that backgrounded the drive--that carried them into the finals? Why ,none other tha. Sugar Jim Henry, with his fire-scarred hands and his unshaken courage. There's no prize for come-backs, for those who survive the bludgeoning of fate with head unbowed, If there was, Sugar Jim Henry would be one of the candidates. ) Your comments and suggestions for this column will be welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, c/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St., Toronto. . alvert wim LIMITED AMHERSTBURG, ONTARIO there was short, for at the As this is written the Ontario horse racing season has been in.pro- gress less than a fortnight. But already, according to the grape- vine, Toronto sales of headache powders and other pain-relicvers has more than doubled. - * * * : For while we. have sometimes doubted whether horse racing does very much toward improving the breed of horseflesh, we would be the first to contend that it is of the utmost value in developing a breed of the gamest animals on earth. Gluttons for punishment, undaunt- ed by defeat, heads bloody but un- bowed; bruised and battered but' coming back for more--these are only a few of the phrases appli- cable to the species of Genus Homo known as the Horse Player. In fact we sometimes think it must have been a confirmed horse-player the poet had in mind when he penned the immortal lines-- > "I'll lay me down and bleed "awhile, And then I'll rise and fight © again." * * * Why do we say that the horse- player is so game? Well, he knows that there are at least 53 ways in hich a horse can lose a race--and these are honest ways, and don't include such things as the owner not wishing the horse to cop till the odds are better, the jockey hav- ing a small wager on some other steed in the race, or any of the dozens of other kinds of skulldug- * gery that sometimes takes place on a race track--but not, of course, and thank goodness, on tracks in this beloved Ontario of. ours, since our racing was purified. LI * Nor do the 53 ways inelude-- as Horace Wade recalls in The Police Gazette--such things as the great Eddic Arcaro's recipe for , blowing the 1949 Pimlico Cup at historic old Pimlico race track. America's premier rider proved he doesn't do all his sleeping in bed by misjudging the finish of the two and a half mile race. He pulled up sharply the first time past the stands while enjoying a comfortable lead atop the odds-on favorite, Blue Hills. He forgot there was another lap to go and Pilaster galloped past him to a lucky victory. De * * Arcaro's bonehead play at Pim- lico was not without precedent. In the 1946 Kentucky Derby, Jockey Job Dean Jessop misjudged the finish and took fold of his mount, All Tanked- Up--Huge new fuel tanks, largest of their type ever mounted on a plane, give added flight range to the B-478, latest model of the Boeing stratojet series. Tanks are painted black and white so that they may easily be recovered in drop tests, Sign For Title Bout--Sugar Ray Robinson (left) keeps an eye on the 'proceedings as Joey Maxim puts the pen to a contract for their June 21 title bout in New York's Yankee Stadium. Welterweight champ Robinson will be seeking Maxim's light-heavyweight laurels Hampden, seventy yards from the pole. It cost him second money in the Bluegrass classic, * * . Not quite so costly was the men- tal lapse of Joe Notter on Colin in the 1908 running of the Bel- mont Stakes. Notter pulled up at the wrong furlong pole, saw his mistake and booted Colin into act- fon again in time to win by a head and thereby keep intact Colin's un- beaten record. It was a close shave for a horse which started 15 times during his career and '15 times landed home in front. * * * The chap who coined the phrase "nothing is sure but death and taxes" must have been a horse player. If so, he might have met a well known horseman who cam- paigned the horse, Milton, over tracks in the Middle West a few years ago. Milton was a tough horse to figure ont, due to a chronic - case of rheumatism which plagued him off and on throughout his rac- ing life, making him_a most uncer- tain betting tool. Many oavners would have given him up as a bad proposition, but Simons bided his time and waited for the proper day and the right spot. * * * He finally found - a race he thought Milton could win. There was an immediate change in the horse's "training routine. The rheu- matic old fellow plodded off towards the saddling paddock under heavy layers of blankets which were stripped from his back in the pad- dock stall. There his shoulders were rubbed liberally with hot al- cohol and witch hazel. He was again covered under a double layer of blankets. - * * Bookmakers, although informed of these strange shenanigans, re- fused to take the horse seriously, sniffing their disdain and laying him on their slates at 60 to 1, They overlooked the. fact that Milton was parading to the post sound as the proverbial bell of brass, * * Simons had picked a Saturday for his: attempted "killing," a day ~ when the bookmaking ring was open to more than 80 layers of odds. He meandered from one book to another, betting small chunks of change on his color bearer as the price slowly receded to a final 20 to 1. So quictly had it been done ~ that. not until bookmakers totalled up their bets afterward did they find that they stood to lose nearly - $300,000 among them if the rheu- matic Milton won the race. It was one of the few times that book- makers deserted their stools and surged down to the railing to watch a race, ' . * . Simons, figuring cvery man had his price, left nothing to chance. Just to insure an: honest ride his jockey, a boy named Webber, rode with tickets in his boot calling for $5,000 on Milton's nose. * * * It was a rejuvenated charger which snapped away from the tape that 'afternoon, his nostrils glowing crimson as coals of fire. There were none of the rheumatic kinks which had landed him among the "also rans" in so many traces. On the upper turn he finally surged to the front, shooting out from the pack as if propelled by a' spring to take a four length lead in as many strides. . * SNe * A collective moan went up from the bookmaking ranks while Sim- ons looked on serenely from his position near the finish line, watch- ing more than a quarter of a mil- lion dollars coasting home into his pocket, Fifty yards from the judges' stand the field was driving hard behind Milton, with no apparent chance to catch tha. elusive, flying figure. And right then, with victory less than a dozen leaps ahead, the + horse stepped on a stone, stumbled badly and crashed into the dust with a broken leg. ; * . * No, there is nothing sure on a race track! The hazards are couni- less. Horses which loom as copper- riveted cinches often tumble in de- feat. Back in 1931 Equipoise, turf- dom's famous "Chocolate Soldier," o* a kindred spirit in Lyle Simons, was held at odds of 3 to 20 to win the Chesapeakke Stakes at Havre de Grace. "Chicago" O'- Brien, who parlayed show bets on short priced favorites into a mil- lion dollar bankroll, bet $25,000 on Equipoisc just to pay his week- end expenses. Then, when the dust of battle had settled, a stunned grandstand counted Equipoise a straggling" sixth, 13 lengths behind the winning Anchors Aweigh, hob- bling off the track with a blind quarter crack which ended his use- fulness for the year. It was one of" the greatest upsets in modern turf history, . * * Despite popular belief, lightning can strike more than once in the same place. Some years ago, in th» Grand Prix at Saratoga, Vol- ante at odds of 1 to 12 was sound- ly whipped by the 10 to 1 shot Royal Arch, which would today be equivalent to : cheap claiming plug winning over Citation. Volante immediately sought revenge in the California Stakes at the same course against the same horse. This time Royal Arch was 20 to 1 as com- pared to the prohibitive 1 to 20 price posted against Volante. * » * Just before post time a horse owner sauntered up to a bookmaker and said: : "I'm forced to travel to Chicago so 1 think I'll let you pay the price of my railroad ticket. Just bet me $400 on Volante." + The famous plunger, Mike Dwy- er also liked Velante to the tune of $40,000 to win a comparatively paltry $2,000. Whereupon Royal Arch, who couldn't read odds and didn't know he was outclassed, again won in a canter, * * * Yes, brethren, take it from an expert, your dyed-in-the-wool horse- player is a champion -- well a champion something-or-other, Marks Birthday -- President Tru- man is shown on the eve of his 68th birthday. When: asked by reporters how he felt, he re- plied, "I feel 28." Seeing Double Drowsiness as well as drinking can make you see double, declares Dr. Nathaniel Kleitman, Univer- sity of Chicago 'physiglogist, The eye fatigue that results in double vision is part 'of the body's daily cycle of sleep and widkefulness, of high and low temperatures, it ap- pears. Kleitman tested the vision of 'thirteen men and five woriten kept awake during a thirty-hour, period. Only those who showed symptoms of drowsiness had. diffi- culty in seeing properly. The dec- line. began shortly after midnight, reached its peak between 7 and 9 in the morning, after which there was spontancous recovery even though the subjects' were kept wide awake. By 2 the next after- noon vision was almost as efficient as it had been at the start of the experiment, All this may help ac- count for the relatively high rate .of automobile accidents during the early morning hours. Sun In His Eyes Caused Boxer's Death It's more than forty years now since boxing managers started a frantic search for a "White Hope," add John N EE Us I ;----.-------------------- ~ GLASSIFIED ADVERTISING BABY OHIOKS DAY old chicks to order," But 3-4 weg pullets, limited cockerels. day old and started, prompt shipment. Bray Hatchery, Hamllton, Ontario rst. erie fea QRE £0. heat the coloured Jack-Jalhu son, For while he' strutted as World's Heavyweigh Champion, Johnson was an arrogant and ob- jectionable personality, and the boxing world: wanted to get rid "of him at all costs. In America, where racial troubles were rife, promoters scoured ranches, lumber camps, mines and factories, and dozens of young giants were uncarthed. Some of them proved useless from the mo- ment they first pulled gloves on. Others made progress;, and from among them it was hoped that one, at least, would be capable of chal- lenging Johnson. The search went on until, out of the Golden West, rode Luther Mec- Carty. He was a cowboy from a Nebraska ranch, nincteen years of age, good looking, 6 ft. 4 in. in his socks and tipping the scales at 216 pounds. New "White Hope" Billy McCarney, a manager with an cager eye for a heavyweight prospect, was responsible for bring- ing McCarty to the fore. He spot- ted the youngster at a small town fight tourney and, after watching him knock out his opponent with the neatest right uppercut _you could wish to sec, persuaded the Nebras- kan to come under his wing. Ie found that Luther was the son of a patent medicine pedlar who 'called himself Chief White Tagle and went from one Western town to another selling a certain cure for all ills. This brought the boy into contact with travelling showmen and eventually the box- ing booth. : » Eventually Luther leit his father and becamé a cowboy. But the ring was a great attracfion and he 'never missed an opportunity to pull on the gloves. Under McCar- ney's tuition it wasn't long before he was breaking into the headlines. When he'd given his fighter a thorough testing, McCarney brought him East and the towns went crazy over the new "White Hope." His romantic cowboy back- ground, his fine features and the way he regularly sent his opponents into dreamland, made McCarty the most sought-after heavyweight in the country, He beat the outstanding con- tenders one by one, finally knock- ing out Al Palzer, who claimed to be the White Heavyweight Cham- pion of the. World. The Little Preacher This victory, gained after eighteen rounds of savage battling, put Mec- Carty in a position to challenge Jack Johnson himseli, But John- son was in Europe so to fill in time McCarty was matched with a mediocre Canadian heavy named Arthur Pelkey, They met at Calgary, Alberta, in a huge arena bwit specially to house ten thousand spectators, To safeguard against bad weather the place was covered in, 'with huge glass windows in the roof, , The fight was a scll-out and the place was soon packed with an ex- cited throng. It was a dul day, although there were signs that the sun might break through eventu- ally, and the skylights were opened. Smartly on the scheduled time of 12:30 p.m., Pelkey and McCarty entered the ring. Each 'received a tremendous welcome; and while the gloves were being put on, a little man climbed through the ropes and was given a big hand. He was the local preacher, taking - advantage of the occasion to make an appeal for funds with which to buy a bell for his chyrch. He fin- ished by saying: "Here are two fine young men, in perfect physical con- dition, ready for their big test. And it should Temind all of us always to be ready for our big test; to be ready to ineet our Maker, when the time comes." J He bowed and left the ring. The announcer told the spectators that this was a twenty-round contest for the White Heavyweight Champion- ship of ithe World, the gong sound- ed and McCarty stepped from his corner. | vy mel "Grim Tragedy © "7; There was a momentary silence | and then a roar went up as he stab- bed in a left and then drove a hard right to the Canadian's head. The blow landed high, but it sent Pel- ®ey back on his heels. They «sparred, | then McCarty glided in to repeat the move. But at that moment the sun broke through the heavy clouds for the first time on that dull May day and strong sunshine streamed through the open window in the roof with * the power of a scarchlight, The sun caught McCarty full in the face, halting him in his tracks. He raising his left glove to shield his eyes and immediately Pelkey swung a terrific right that landed under the heart." McCarty's knees sagged, He sank to the boards, rolled over and lay on his back, the sunshine lighting up the prostrate form. The referce counted up to ten without McCarty 1s taken accord directions Is a safe way te induc or quiet the nerves when tense. $1.00 Stores only! v NEW PRICES For chicks. pullels, cockercels. Immediate delivery. Order now with deposit---none sexed $11 90 per hundred--Pullets $17.90; I week $26.90; 3 week $31.90; ¢ week $36.50. Cockerels $5.90 up Write, now, Galt Chickerles, Galt, Ontaylo WHEN you sclect chicks this sure to buy proved bloodlines. 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"Haven't you got a sense of humor?" "I don't have to laugh," said the girl. "I'm leaving on Friday." -- boss Remedy... oe "sential. Used Tires, $7.00 and up. Retreaded Tirge, - MEDICAL - Ws important--every sulferer of Rh matic Pains or Neuritls should try Dixe MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 Elgin $1.25 Express Prepaid ARTHRITIS --~RHEUMATISM! Pain [11] away like muglc, as you est. No dry \ 3 a diet secret, $10.00, W, Glass, P.O, Ho 84, Delatr, New. Jersey. Ottawa BLEED like a new born baby--deep, paagys ful and sound. Take amazing non bat forming "Ketsom Tablets, Rush #1, for liberal supply---alsd 100 tablets $5.00. @inperlal Industries, P.O, Box #01, Winnlpes. ® FEMINEX © One woman tells another, Take super "FEMINEX". to help alleviate palin, tress and nervous tension associated wi wonthly periods. $5.00 Postpaid ln plala wgapoer, POST'S CHEMICALS 880 QUEEN ST. EAST ASTHMA WHY suffer if there !s something that w help you? 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Hermon, Ontario, Teach WANTED Two who want to carn $5000 to $5000 yearly. Sales experience not neces sary. Car an asset. Should bs able te start lmmediately. Reply giving plone number to I Mcintyre, Room 1101, §§% Richmond St. W., Toronto, For Eczema-- Skin Troubles Make up your mind today that you are golog to give your skin a real chance to get well. Go to any good drug store and get an original bottle of MOONE'S EMERALD O1L--it lasts many days because it is highly concentrated. [lie very first application will give you reef-- the itching of Eczema is quickly stopped --erp- tions dry up and scale off fn a very few days. The same is true of Itching Toes and Feet, Barber's Itch, Salt Rheum and other skin troubles Remember that MOONE'S EMERALD OIL In a clean, powerful, penetrating Antiseptic ON that does, not stain or leave a greasy residue Complete satisfaction or money back. men Ingrown Toenails Natl F'g rellevea pain instantly and removes ngrown portion of ne!'l in a few applications, $1.50, Guaranteed remedy no acd. Safe for children. 15g CORN FIX flomoves corns and calluses Jn 10 min. tutes. Guarantesd Remedy, 0c, Al your druggist or sent postpaid by "F. THOMPSON 7 ORCHARD CRESCENT © TORONTO 18, ONTARIO [SSUE 21 -- 1952 MACDONALD"S SY EIS SE SAY EAE Yo ir « TE soit LL RATS AL . (3 Sond) LA Gy AY Fl i fond [fo 44