Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1952-11-19, Page 5TRE Calvert SPORTS COLUMN • It is only fair and right that those who sparkled in the hockey crusades of other years should get the preference as the roll is called to place the greats of the game in their niches in the Nall of Fame,Perhaps the moderns wi:l chafe at this. They may wish to see honored those of their own era, page. There are now 42 namea listed for the Hall, of which number 32 are players, the other 10 selected because of their contributions to the game in legislation, rules, or equipment. This agent has at least one preference, in the names to be included in the next group names by the Committee. That is the late George Hainsworth, who inhis playing days with Canadiens compiled a seasonal coaling record quite unlikely to be equalled is these days when the rules are designed to place the accent on scoring. • Hainsworth, in this writer's opinion, was one of the greatest goalers of ail time. Like that other great Canadian goaler the late Georges Vezina, who preceded him by many years, Hainsworth was ice -cool in the nets, almost mechanical in his perfection ,and in his complete lack of what might be called "showmanship." Ex- pressionless, unexcited, he just stopped pucks, blocked the heaviest 'drives without the Ricker of an eye -lash. Once, after this agent complimentedhim on one of his many shut -out games, Hainsworth remarked, as if annoyed with him- self "I'm sorry I can't put on a show like some of the other goalers, But I just can't do it. I can't look excited because I'm not. I can't shout at other players because that's not my style, I can't dive on easy shots and make them look hard. I guess all I can do is stop pucks." He did very well indeed, at that chore. In the season of 1928- 29, facing some of the game's greatest snipers, such as Nels Stewart, Ace Bailey, Bill Cook, Carson Cooper, Harry Oliver, Cooney Weiland, Frank Boucher, and others of that unforgettable quality, little Hainsworth scored 22 shut -outs in a 44 -game schedule, was scored on only 43 times in the regular season, an average of slightly under one goal per game. No record has ever closely ap- proached this. Undoubtedly this little fellow, who hailed from the great hockey incubator, Ontario's Kitchener district, was one of the all- time greats of the nets. And yet, curiously, he never made the all- star teams of his era, for Charlie Gardiner, "Tiny" Thompson, and Roy "Shrimp" Worters were names to conjure, with when, in 1930-31, the selection of all-star teams began. Your comments and suggestions fof this column will he welcomed by Elmer Ferguson,ec/o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St., Toronto. Catvtt DISTILLERS LIMITED AMHERSTIURO, OPITAIIO SPO1IT, by SLXBtTC'i lC When people of my generation complain that our football has become far too Amercanized— end that Yankification has re- moved a whole lot of interest from a once -grand games—the usual retort from the modernists is "Aw, you're too old to keep up with the times" or words to that effect. They also point to the huge crowds attending games in the Big Four and West- ern Senior League, forgetting That these are strictly pay-on- ihe--line outfits, dominated by American coaches and players, and ballyhooed by our sports writers In a manner that sickens anyone who believes that Can- adian kids should have a chance to play a Canadian game on Can- adian soil. After all, when we go to see the Hamilton Ticats, the Toronto Argonauts or the Winnipeg Blue Bombers we are paying to look at pretty much — a second or even third-grade American team. The proper basis of com- parison is not what any of the above-mentioned teams would do to Canadian outfits such as Toronto Varsity or Western University --but how they would fare stacked up against, say, Cleveland Browns, Chicago Bears or Los Angeles Rams. • a • To read some of the maga- zine articles- that pour across the border, and to listen to the super -heated broadcasts that `vend their way north, one Red Yacht Races—Russians like yacht races, too, as seen in the above picture. Seen enjoying the sport is a group of Soviet sail - Ada, competing in the Lenigrad competition of the all - Union races, Their fln-keel boat has just taken the wind, moving them ahead . In the contest off the port of Leningrad, in which over 470 sportsmen took part. would imagine that Yankee foot- ball is some sort of a super - sport, played exclusively by supermen. But nowadays, even down there, some folks are be ginning to think that football' is degenerating into a pretty dull affair. Few men have written more books, articles, short stories and essays based on American sport than John R. Tunis, and most of them have been highly favorable and en- thusiagtic. Now for a change— hearken to a few paragraphs taken from an article in the New York Times by Mr, Tunis, en- titled "The Kick is Out of Football." Hearken—also remem- ber the next time somebody suggests that we give Canadian football back to the Canadian's. Take it away, Mr. Tunis, o * e "Some time ago Robert M. Hutchins, then boss man at the University of Chicago, predicted that in twenty-five years the Yale Bowl would be an archaeological ruin. If the game of football gets any more boring to watch, the Bowl and other stadia in the nation will resemble the Forum in Rome long before 1975. "The reasons why football is such a dull game today are many and varied, but most of them can be traced back to the coaches and the rule -makers, who are in many cases the sante people. They have taken the kick out of the game for the ancient gra- duate. * a v "No doubt the motives of the coaches and parliamentarians are praiseworthy—removing some of the risk 'for, the players, and so on—but the effects of their labors from the spectator's view are calamitous in two ways: they have complicated, systematized, broadened and otherwise altered the game so that the fan is utter- ly confused about what is hap- pening on the field; and they have ruled out or abandoned some of the greatest moments in the game so that it has lost much of its drama, 5 0 * "First, consider the elements that put the spectator into a state of confusion, in addition to any normal size haze he may have acquired from a flask. Many of these new aids to confusion are connected with the two -platoon system—one squad of eleven hus- kies performing while a team is on the offensive and a different 'eleven on the defensive. Sup- pose Princeton is playing Old Nostalgia. Nostalgia fumbles. What happens? 5 * * "Nowadays eleven robots swathed in armour and all look- ing exactly alike trot out onto the field to represent Old Nos- talgia, while eleven others shut - fie off. Off goes McChesty, our dynamic passer, No. 45, (Or is he No, 547) Off goes Van Flana- gan, Nostalgia's great open-field runner, In come a lot of guys named Joe. And, of course, to add to the confusion, in some eleven new players for Princeton, The worst of it is that we came to see McChesty and Van Flans, gan Score on Princeton, Alae, they may not appear on the field again until the end of the third quarter, • • * "This sort of thing may assist the coaches in building a winning team (although, unfortunately, Old Nostalgia keeps on losing as it always did) and help the tele- vision annotlxlcers, but for the old grad, by nature a hero War - shipper, it's no fun. The tw4- platoon system has been the death of hero worshipping. When. your hero happens to be Mc - Chesty, No, 45 (or is it No. 54?) you'll be able to adore him only on rare' occasions. Even then, you know exactly what he will do. Shortly he will toss a for- ward and Van Flanagan will catch it. Or try to. 0 * 5 ":Phe chances are that when Nostalgia at last recovers the ball, and Van Flanagan and Mc- Chesty return to play, you wont even recognize them. The fact is you don't see enough of any player to know him by sight. To- day a minimum of forty-eight men are involved in every game. When Princeton started against Columbia in New York this sea- son they fielded a team of fifty, nothing unusual. * 5 o "What's become of the Mighty Atom? Or the Galloping Ghost? Or the Four. Horsemen? Where are our heroes of yesteryear? They've vanished since the two - platoon system was invented, and as a result, what used to be football personalities have now become an assortment of num- bers. How can the old grad wor- ship a number? 'Come on, you 53, come on for dear old Nostal- gia, come on 48, soon to be re- placed by 37!' * a Y "Another factor making for the confusion of modern football is that nobody can possibly under- stand or keep up with the rules. This even goes for the coaches-. Otherwise they wouldn't change them every twelve months. One of the eternal charms of small boat sailing is the knowledge that nothing has been radically chang- ed since some Phoenician invent- ed the . keel about the time of Dido of Carthage. The rules of baseball are almost the same as they were at Cooperstown. Chess has scarcely altered since the days of Ghengis Khan. "But football coaches keep picking away at their game every year like a gang of small boys dismantling a model T k'ord. * 0 e "As compared with football, baseball is an open book. The rules are not changed every Tuesday and Thursday to suit the manager of the St. Louis Browns. The ,spectators see the field, the play, the players. Jackie Robinson is not so completely swathed in armour as to be un- recognizable. Three strikes are still out as in the days of Abner Doubleday. You may ;aaot, it is true, understand the cerebrations of the Great Mind standing in the shadows behind third base. But what he is thinking will be plain soon enough. If it's a hit-and-run play, you know when it happens. You can see it too, But in football it's probably a hidden ball play -and you have to listen to the radio announcer to find out what happened, • * o "Here is the point where we come to the second category of the things that are wrong with football today—the reduction in its dramatic quality. Bit by bit, .the coaches, who make the rules to suit themselves, have whittled and pruned the gams down to size. Many plays have vanished or are largely neglected. Once there was the drop kick, the quick kick, the onside kick. One rarely sees them nowadays be- cause the coaches have taken the kick out of football. • • * "These plays didn't hurt any- one and they added 'c the color, the excitement and the variety of the game. What happened to the point after touchdown? In the old days, this was one of football's most exciting plays. When the ball crosssd the goal line, it Was brought out fifteen yards front he spot and kicked at the resultant angle, Today, regardless of where it crossed the line, the ball is centred be- fore the goal posts ox the three - yard line. Your 80 -year-old grandmother could kick a goal after touchdown nowadays. But remember the time when the player who Was on his way to a score at one side of the grid- iron had to think about the point after touchdown, So he struggled toward the goal posts, keeping liis feet somehow, lynging, plunging with four mastodons on his back to the centre of the field' That's out. a 0 0 "Anyhow, they fact is that the game has lost seine of its dra- matic moments and our Heroes are -gone. The triple -threat man who ran, passed, kicked—and tackled too—usually all ahnazing- ly well, went out with Frank Waddle Gus Do During School Hours? — Gus, the duck, is the friendliest duck your ever saw. He waddles to school every day with his young master, Dennis Young, ten -year-old, polio victim. Gus thinks it would be duck soup to go to school, but teacher says :'no." Gus must make his way home alone, and the trip includes a dangerous dash past a butcher shop. Paul Ederer, 11, is another of Dennis' friends, and wheels the handicapped boy to school every day. One -Man "Navy" — Harold Charles Green, above, is a one- man "naval" force for Queen Elizabeth II. The veteran barge- man handles all problems of water transportation for the Queen, as he did for her father, King George VI. Green, who bears the title of "Queen's Wa- terman;' will wear this ornate costume at the Coronation cere- monies in London next June. Merriwell. Today your star is an offensive or defensive specialist. There's no such thing as our hero winning the game with a long drop-kick in the last, darkening feverish seconds of play. Pro- bably there'd be no place for men like Ken Strong or like Charlie Brickley, who kicked five fieldgoals against Yale on a single afternoon. Larry Kelley, the great Eli captain, would merely be an offensive left end today due to play twenty-eight minutes in the Harvard game. a a o "The old grad has the feeling that something has gone from the game he knew. The coaches tell him that today football is bet- ter played and mor' efficiently played. No doubt, but efficiency has replaced individuality. Pro- bably everyone does whatever he does much better than it used to be done, but there is no health in it. Albie Booth was an indi- vidual in the wtay he walked, ran, kicked and threw a pass. From a plane 1,000 feet above the Bowl you could tell Booth down there on the field carrying the ball. Those players don't seem to exist today ' • a • So much tor Mr. Tunis. We started off by saying that our football had become much too Americanized, and we'll finish up on the same note. Here is the whole thing in a couple of nut- shells. We have eight senior. teams in Canada with apologies, of course, to the O.R.F.U.—and every one of those- eight has an American coach. With that sOrt of domination, how long do you think it will take for us to adopt American rules in their entirety? * 0 " The day is coming—and it isn't far away—when is kicker who can hoof that ball fol both dis- tance and direction, the way some of the oldsters used to, coil) be as rate as a Dodo. And ,just how many Dodos have you tact in your travels lately? They Use Marbles Instead Of Money During the last war skilled mechanics perfected little glass marbles to such a degree that they could be substituted for cer- tain steel bearings The fact that they reflect light and also magnify has qualified them for use by doctors, weather experts, scientists, motorists, cinemas, advertisers and jewel- lers. They are made in 26 differ- ent diameters, rangin; from the size of cricket balls to tiny beads so small they can hardly be seen. The smallest sizes are called Ballotini, and are used in the storing of blood, . When blood, is collected from a donor, it is necessary to extract a certain part of it which would make it hard- en. This is done by causing the blood to flow over the tiny Bal- lotini marbles, when the harden- ing substance collects on the sur- face of the spheres. Motorists have cause to be grateful to glass marbles for the safety they give. Many road signs are made of marbles, each glass ball being an individual reflector so that headlights at night spell out safety warnings. "Cat's-eyes" in the centre of the road depend for their aston- ishing efficiency on glass marbles set in rubber cushions. Tons of glass marbles go to lithographers and engravers to be used in the smoothing of the sur- face of copper printing plates. Special marbles are made for their purpose to withstand the punishment of being rolled back 'and. forth over the metal sur- faces. Some fish hatcheries place marbles on the bottom of pools, claiming better results during the spawning season. Big paper mills use glass marbles to speed paper - feeding appliances. Recently a cablegram from Johannesburg, South Africa, reached a British marble manu- facturing company. It requested an air -express shipment of 100,- 000 marbles in "three -colour strip combinations on opalescent glass.' A troublesome situation had developed in the interior of the Dark Continent. Roving natives had captured a tribe's currency —marbles. The new shipment was needed to replace the old medium of exchange. HEALTH FOOD A group of fishermen in Maine broke camp and began their hike back to the nearest rail= road station. En route they stopped at a lonely form house • and asked if they could buy lunch. "O.K." said the old lady at' the door, "if you'll be satis- fied with pork chops." The hun- gry men fell to With a will, and when they had finished, com- plimented the old lady on the fine quality of the meat. "I should hope it was," she ag- reed heartily, "That wasn't none of your butchered stuff. That hog died a natural death." EAT ANYTHING WITH FALSE TEETH It you have trouble with plates that elle, rook and these Fore gums —Loy Intone Plnati-Liner, One appllratioe makes plater at anuely wltho,0 5,540 or poste, became: Brimms.Piaetl-Liner harden. per- manently to your plea, 11 relines and rent, loose plena Ina wet' be powder or peat, eon do. Even on old rubber plates you get good reaulte dr month. to a year or longer, YOU CAN EAT ANYTHING* Simply IoY .oft utrlp of Pleatl•Llner on troebleanme upper or lower. Bite and It wade perteetIY. HOY to We. 0eetole,,, odorless, harmless to you and your plinth. Removable se ,hireeled. Tinto cleaner Ineluded. Money bitok 1t not completely satinecd, It sot available at yam drug More, bend 51.60 for gainer for 1 anat. WIIDROOT LTD., FORT ERIE, ONT. Dept, TW BR(MMS PLASTI•LINER 04C 75.„ ,T 000,700* REk.RER ..Classified Advertising.. _. ... eussi'ra wovou. For selling oaly020 of our Uenittitnl multi• t�eplor tinsel religious mottoes at .40 eget,. They sell like hot oakos, Write today. we will Trust You, Maple Leat Greeting Cards, 1406 Bishop, Montreal 24. Dept,M. DANT 01110148 BEFORE you order. your 1060 eidoket, compare Twaddle .Motility and Tweddlo Primo Tweddle chicks have Iota of R.O.P. breeding' batt of Mon. we have three grades o1 chicks to choose from, all of theta with R.O,P, breeding bolt of them. Our money-maker quality chicks compare 1r1 priced with moat of the laweat' prlcad chicks on the market. Our large volume enables our to sail for lean. Catalogue. Also turkey peeks, at ecanpetltiv0 prlcea. 9'WEDULE CHICK HATelinniltS LTD. Fergus Ontario DYEING AND. OLDANANO RAVE you anything node dyeing or Olean. Me Write to. ue 5Or Information. We ire glad to answer your questions, De. oartment H. Parker's Dye Wnrke Ltmlted, 101 Vance St. Toronto. , FOR BALD GARAGES --Portable, prefabricated, runt. wennge Shelter Roofs,, 546 0' Sc tionaal1edBuiftgng. Show - bridge, Quebec. ALUMINU3I. New: Corregatod. 28" x 0', Best Canadian Prim— Delivered:-, :1.40 Sheet, 910 Square. flu Udine Material, Lao Gutndon, Quebec. PLUMBING AND HEATING CATALOGUE FREE The 1962 catalogue m oft the press. Write for your 0057 or visit the new ware- house and nee for ypureelt the model bathroom dtoplaya In white and Coloured fixtures, In standard size bathrooms with tiled or pointed walls, lust the way you want a bathroom In your own home. We have sinks and . sink cabinet unite, lavatory basins andtoilets, pressure ems. tem, and electric water heaters. range boiler., pipe and fitting. In copper, gal- vanized and -east iron, 'septic and oil tanks, ,refrigerators and ele0trie ranges, a complete Ilse of furnace., air condi. Honing units and hot water heating aye. tents with convector rads, We deliver to Yofreuright. nearest railway etatlnn, you pay on e. V. .101101805 PL0ND1N0 SUPPLIES Streelevllle, Ontario 10 GERMAN Shepherd Pupple9. 9 Collis Included. 6 weeks old. Heathen loin Papers 61'cwatlere, 0i'y bridge. Ontario. BUILD up your resistance to colds and otter anmentn. `Staff of Lite" a new toed supplement to relieve vitamin and mineraOrder from o0 B. Hartle, mettle $ Harrle,Trading Pmt, Parts. Importer, Distributor. Sale. Agent, invited. MOTALOT givem car ring and valve job while driving. Guaranteed 200,000 oaten Price 116. Ernest's Sales Co,. Formosa, Ontario, HAPPY unsarr PERFUME 66, The perfume that expres,ea your true personality with an unforgotable frog. ranee. 05» per bottle. Refund guaranteed. Money order C.O.D. L Haye, 1336 8t. Antoine West, Montreal 9. PULLETS, Range Reared, Healthy, ready to lay, Hampshire x Rock, Sussex s Hampshire. Hampshire x Suesox, New Hampshire, 5 to 05 Months old. Ali hatch. ed and raised on own farm, Reaeonaole prices. Thompson's Poultry Farm & Hatchery. Georgetown, Ontario, BIGGEST Stock of New and Rebuilt Band Instruments 1 Write 'Tour Wants." we will be glad to quote lowest Prlcee. HUGH ZENTZ. Elkhart. Indiana. CRESS 'WART RI0110VEit — Leaves no -. emus. Tour Druggist sells CRESS. MEUICA L SATISFY YOURSELF — Every sufferer of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis should try Dixon's Remedy. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 Elgin 011awa $1.25 Express Prepaid ASTHMA WHY auger Ir there to eumelh1116 that will help you? Hundreds of thousands, of eats lave been sold on a money back guar. oaten So 0003' 00 vee 5000» your tweet. coma hove been diagnosed as Asthma, you ewe 1t to yourself to try Aeihmanetrin, halt your Druggist NEN AND WOMEN (natant relief from aoro cracked hands. "Special Medicated Hand Cream." Fav- ourite bf doctors. housewives, outdoor men. Large jar 91. Money back guarantee. 3om•ard Drugs, 2$12 Batburet. Toronto. Ontario. SKIN ITCH, CRACKING, BURNING SKIN, Eczema. Psoriasis, Rash, Ring- worm. Pimple's, Biaclrheada and other skin ,`options quickly relieved or money refunded with El1k's Eczema Ointment No. 6. A prescription of a famous akin specialist 51.00, $2.10. Get It from your druggist or order from Eltk'a Medicine. Co. Dept, 1VL. Saskatoon, Smk, BLACKHEADS Enlarged Pores 3e ea. Blemishes Corrected Two Weeks' Supply — $T,00 No. 827 - 736 GRANVILLE STREET VANCOUVER, B.C. Had Sores Over Legs Size of Silver Dollars —In Misery for 20 Years— Read His Thankful Letter m snore wheat dust -tried ankland everything—keptmmyo legs bandaged for over four years—In misery for 20 AMC." macs Mr, G. P..ot Smr, Idaho, 'Had sores over my legs the elmofsilver dollars. Saw Emerald 031 advertised and says to my wife, Thee the relietrlsore got IrightlhwoYl we keep'll try Its' and)ory Emerald Oil In the house all the time for cuts and scratches. You eon the my name if you want to Thanks for the relief." 'ntoueands of bottles are sold very Year to relieve just such eases of stubborn. skindtching. Irritation and soreness. Sminleso--groasclesl--MOONp s Eh1ERAI.n OIL to highly concentrated and a `mail Mile Isla a 1000 lime. At If You're You're TIRED ALL THE TIME Everybody get. a bit run-down now and then, tired -put, heavy -headed, and maybe bothered by backaches. Perhaps nothing seriously wrong, just a temporartorte condition caused by excess acids and wastes. That's the time to take Dodd'a Kidney Pills, Dodd's stimulate the kidneys, and so help restore their Normal action of removing excess acids and wastes. Then you feel better, sleep better, work better. Get Dodd's Kidney Pills now. Look for the blue hos with the red hand at ell dneggista, You can depend on Dodd's. 52 ISSUE 47 — 1952 `8' OPP0IYI'UNPP10B Eva 020ON AND WOMEN 13E A HAIRDRESSER GEN OANAUA'8 - L1140250 800004 Great Opportunity Learn aairdreeeing Pleasant dignified PMteseton, geed wages. rboueando of-euceesatu3 Mem) er0Atetoe America's Greatest System illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL RAIRDRESSTNG 5011004.4 868 glom St, 0,, Toronto Branches: 11 King Bt., Hamilton 72 Rideau St,. Ottawa WOMAN — ' x001 .CAN EASIL' EARN 003TRA 310NET. Twenty Telephone calls—Twenty Dollars. Write to full Particular.: P.O. Box 501, London. Out END EMBARRASSING BALDNESS. At last a tested, proven hair restorer. Quickly promotes hair 07000)' 1n' all ranee of baldness, regardless 01 age or condition. Sold on full money bank guarantee. Par particular's write: Dis. tributor Thalia Herbal Products, 72 West Ave. South, Hamilton. Ont, TOUR future on Railway, trained' AO Station Telegrapher Insures Security. Train with Self Teaching Machine- at home, Also teach ABC Shorthand by mail. Free folder. Casson Systems, Toronto, FREE Literature 1 New Discovery I rear Aura 10 your Future. Are You seeking the whole truth? Superet Proem, 2510 W. 3rd, Street, Los Angolee 6, 0.51. "THE BOOK OF HEALTH" Write for "Ire*" copy today. Regain your heath and vogor, The "Boal, of Health" contains 64 pagan of reliable information on effeotivo treatments and dicta for common ailments. Dept Key 10, Health. Products, Kelowna, British Columbia, PATENTS LN OFFER to every inventor—that of in- vention and full- Information aeon free. rho Ramsay Co., Registered Patent Atter. ne7s. 272 Beek Street, Ottawa. FETHERSTONHA UGH & Company Pa. tent Sollnitore. Established 1890. 550 Say Street,' Toronto Renklet of informs - :ton on request. PERBIINAI. QU1T SMOKING — the easy way. the Tobacco Eliminator. to scientific treat. meat; Quickly eliminates, the craving for tobacco, ride the system of nicotine. C. W. King Pharmacal Ltd. (Alberta). P.O. Box 673, London. Ontaro. RUGS NEW rugs made from your old ruga and woollens. Write for catalogue end price list. Dominion Rug Weaving Demeany, 7477 Dundee Street West, Tornnto, Ont. WANTED WANTED Farmer.. Cream Truck Drivers. Feed Dealers, Implement Dealers, Nursery Salesmen or others to take orders for day old chicks and turkey melte for one of Canada's largest Canadian Ap- proved Hatcheries. Liberal rommiesloa paid. 61 For 1311 details write BOX NUM- ls16, St. Now 'Toronto. ARTHRITIC PAIN Don't suffer night and day—with drill, wearisome aches—or sharp, stabbing pains. Lead an active life again. Take Templeton's T -R -C's, Canada's largest - selling proprietary medicine specially made to bring .Ionged-forreliefto eu$erer8 from arthritic or rheumatic pain. T-841 $i 3s TEMPLETON'S T -R -C's For Quick Cough Relief Mix This Syrup in Your Home Thousands of Canadian house- wives have turned to this well- known recipe for relieving coughs due to colds. It's easy to prepare, and gives you four times as much for your money. Your usual drug counter can supply you with a 2T'z ounce bottle of PINEX CONCENTRATE. Pour this into a 16 ounce bottle and fill up with granulated sugar syrup, or honey or maple syrup. To make the sugar syrup, simply mix 2 cups of sugar with one cup of water ... no cooking needed, and it takes but a minute. Now you'll have an ample supply of fast acting, effective cough syrup for the whole family, so pleasant tasting the children will like it. PINEX — a concentrated blend of proven ingredients—must help bor rttle trdday! money refunded. Get a PINEX FOR COUGHS—EASY— ECONGMICAL EXPORT CANADA'S FINEST CIGARETTh