Evening Star Newspaper, November 23, 1932, Page 19

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Coach of Great Brown University THE BOY WHO MADE GOOD UNBEATEN ELEVEN LATEST SUCCESS McLaughry’s Remarkable Business Versatility Is Equaled on Gridiron. By a Staft Correspondent of The Star. ROVIDENCE, R. I, November P 23.—Lumberman, stockman, zeturer, famous college and professional foot ball play- er, Barrister, student of psychol- ogy and successful college foot ball coach—that's De Ormond “Tuss” McLa'.gLry, Brown's 39- year-old exponent of the triple- wingback formation, whose team meets Colgate tomorrow for the Eastern championship. Both peams are undefeated this seascn. I A T Westminster he brought the team from obscurity to a leader in its class, and he surprised the gridiron world a decade ago by taking an Am- herst team to New York, where it held Percy Haughton's big Columbia team, 0-0. Then he confounded the experts | by matching Bill Roper's pre-game statement by starting his Lord Jeff second team against Roper's second combination at Princeton. The half found the score Princeton 0, Amherst 0. | ‘That the Princeton first team was good enough to get out ahead of Am- herst in the last half was to be ex- pected, but McLaughry's flare for the | dramatic is more often than not backed by sound foot ball sense. Born at Sharon, Pa., the son of Judge and Mrs. James A. McLaughry, the lad with a Scotch family name and the French Christian name, De Ormond, early picked up the nickname “Tuss,” by which he is known throughout the diron world. He doesn't know how acquired the name. One of his brothers told him it came when he was very small because he was such a pussler. ¢CLAUGHRY played tackle and full- back in high school; guard, tackle and offensive end at Michigan and fullback at Westminster. So he’s at home in dealing with every department of his eleven. | The idea of the triple wing-back | formation came like a bolt out of the blue. One afternoon in 1928, midway through a Brown season that held all sorts of promise, a reserve end, Bob Carton, was wreaking havoc with a sweep from a double wing-back forma- tion, with Dick Marson carrying, by ‘Btfln: into the backfield before the play developed. Why not put a back out there to worry and harass that end, give him something to think about besides crash- ing into the apex of a play before it unfolded? McLaughry has had a variel career his way @p to the peersg2 of grid- 22, his path leading through playing expetiencc in two colleges and through thie co2l anl steel sections of ‘Western Pennsylvenia. He was a team- mate cf Knut: Rockne on the famous Massilon, Ohic, pro team of almost two decades ago, roommate of Cornell’s Gilmour Dobie in coeching school, pupil of Rockne in two coaching schools, coach of cozens of players who have become successful foot ball coaches, and is the holder of two college degrees. | is a constant student of Blnck-‘ stone and Coke when he isn't in | the midst of 2 foot ball season, but he is first, last and always a close student of gridiron tactics. Perhaps that’s why he was able to outmaneuver even canny old Pop Warner himself in | the use of wingbacks, for McLaughry has made three grow where Wamer had but two. ‘Two backs outflanking the defensive tackles and one outside the defensive end might seem to be carrying it a bit too far, but McLaughry’s Brown eleven has shot an assortment of double and triple passes, reverses, fake reverses and sweeps into the midrift of a brace of highly rated Eastern opponents to be- come the current sensation of the East, and all that remains before chalking up an Eastern title and a possible trip to the Rose Bowl tournament is a vic- gory over Colgate. McLaughry came to Brown after | coaching at Westminster College and | Amherst, and in seven years at the Providence institution he has turned | out one undefeated team, one team that lost only to Yale, and the 1932 team, that is still undefeated and untied, with one more gome to go. He spent the remainder of that year ex] enting with the idea. He plased | along with it, testing it, pro and disproving its potentialities until 1931, when he installed it as his basic forma- tion for all plays except kicks, even gtving it a quick kick for good measure. | CLAUGHRY makes his home in | Providence. He has three chil- dren, Jane, John and Robert, and | the two boys are carrying on in the | foot ball heritage the father has handed | down. John, 15, is the regular fullback on the Moses Brown School varsity, that is undefeated in this season's play; Robert, 11, is a man of all work in the backfleld of the Moses Brown lower school team. “Tuss” stands 6 feet 2, weighs 208 ds, has a bold forehead which is THAT WAS A SWELL PARTY OF A TIME How'D You UkKE THAT LECTURE WE HEARD AT TH! cws (AsT week? | THOVGHT (T— | WALKED ouT oN . (T RIGHT AFTER AT TH JASPERS, | | DINNER . (T LOOKED | HAD A WHALE |/ poisoNous To [ HEARD FIFTEEN MINUTES OF (T AND WALKED ouT ~ME wAS A BlIe You ? | SAW You AT BANALITIES. BET You LIKE THAT SHOW | [ was crazy — ABOUT TH' MERRY MORONS, SCME You LIKED (2! | WALKED OuUT IN [ THE MIODLE OF THE | THOUGHT THE DANCE AT TH' CoUNTRY CLuB SUCCESS, DIONT [ NEW REWE, TH' | SPOSE 50 IF You LIKE THAT SORT- OF THING, | STOCD (T Ti NINE OCLOCK AND THEN WALKED ouT . | WALKED ouT AFTER THE FIRST ACT. IT wAS Too Py (A5 [»] s€€ TH' DEFEC /g UH-You SEE, | DONT GO TO MANY THINGS AND | —UH- NATURALLY DON'T YEAH, AFTER You'Ve BEEN AROCUND AWHILE You GET 50 You WALK| s OUT WHEN THINGS THAT ARE APPARENT || LOOK SOUR HARVARD FAILURES Coach in No Way Is Blamed for Foot Ball Losses by Crimson Followers. N close to th2 foot ball situation at Cambridge this season make not the slightest criticism of Eddie Casey's coaching. : ‘They hold th=t Casey and his aesist- ants are highly qualified coaches and | that they did everything in their power | to instill foot ball knowledge into a group of players whose megnificent physique was out of all proportion to their ability to grasp those finer points of offense and defense—particularly defense—which an outfit must acquire if it is to get by. There is a suspicion in some guarters that those 162 points, as against 20 for opponents, rolled up in the flnl[ four games cf the seacon created a | mental mood in the team which, when adversity came swiftly, developed into | a mellow and distraught state of m&nd‘ from which the players could not bz | extricated ‘Whatever the cause, however, the fact remains that from the Brown game on, the eleven displayed a sub- normal intelligence which, in the Army and Yale contests especially, made them ripe victims for almost any play whose ultimate purpose was not immediately disclosed. EW YORK, November 23— Harvard men who have been Eddie Casey's competent work as head coach of freshman elevens under | the Horween regime, the skill with| which he handled the Crimson varsity | in his first season, 1931, are accepted | by Harvard men who know the condi- tions under which the coach worked disasters of 1932 do not warrant the immediate conduct cf Eddie and his| staff to the guillotine. Number of Attractive Contests Are ing to attain Gladstonian aspects 88 the hair recedes, and a square-cleft | chin that adds credence to that boyhood nickname story. He spends most of his time at home. | Right now he’s spending about 16 hours a day figuring how to beat Col- gate, a team that has scored 242 points to opponents’ 0 this year. He has ordered his telephone discon- | nected until after Thanksgiving to free | himself from calls for tickets and from | other interruptions while he works out a few new tricks for Colgate’s Andy Kerr. (Copyright, 1552, by North American News- vaper Alliaace, Inc.) . HYATTSVILLE FIVE EAGER. | e A. C. will practice tenight | npany E, District National Guards, in the Central High School gym at 9 o'clock. Hyattsville players will gather at Reeley’s house at 8 o'clock. Games are wanted for Satur- day and Sunday with 145-pound teams having a gym. Call Hyattsville 128-R after 7 o'clock. on Schedule Tomorrow. Severzl attractive games are booked for sandiot foot ball teams here tomor- | Tow. The list includes: Northeast Trojans V8. Congress Heights (135 pounds), Congress Heights, 2 o'clock. Cobra (125 pounds) vs. Marion Preps, Congress _Heights (100 pounds) vs. Anacostia, Congress Heights, 11 o'clock. Anacostia Eagles vs. Cavallers, Fair- lawn field, 1 o'clock. These teams want games for tomor- Tow Falador Preps, Lincoln 3187. St. Gabrie morning game. Call Adams 3784-J. BOUTS TOP GUARD CARD. Featuring a boxing show held last night by the 12ist Engineers, D. C. National Guard, were bouts in which o Bradley defea‘ed Anderson by deci- sion and Andy and J. Talon baitled to a draw. Losing Hawkeyes Sportsmen Score Hurt by Rentner in Last Northwestern Game Due to Iowa’s Gracious Gesture. FINE example of sportsman- ship is told about the Yowa team in its game against Northwestern. Pug Rentner, ! the Purple captain and star half- back, sat on the bench throughout most of the game nursing two fractured ribs. 1In the fourth quarter, with North- | western leading, 31 to 6, and the ! on the Hawkeyes' 1-yard line, ! pulled off his huge coat i trotted into the game for his last appearance in the Purple this year as sufficient evidence that the | 5 SANDLOT GRID LIST BIG | Need False Faces To ‘Deceive’ Irish IOUTH BEND, Ind., November 23 —Army will have to put faces on its backfield stars scouts claim to have discovered. Coach Heartly Anderson’s scouting department reported, after watching Army in nearly every game this sea- son, that the Cadet backs have been. shifted from position to position from week to week, and that their numbers have been changed as often. When the sleuths brought the news Anderson rounded up photo- raphs of each member of the Army %ackfie!d squad, and every day Notre Dame players spend a few minutes getting acquainted with them. The photos will be taken along on the trip East and the Irish figure they will be able to recognize every man_unless disguises are used on the fleld. PICKING ALL-AMERICA DIFFICULT THIS YEAR Stressing of Team Play and Re- sultant Lack of Outstanding Players Complicates Job. By the Assoclated Press. 'EW YORK, November 23—In a college gridiron season notable for the stressing of team play in- stead of individualism, keen observers throughout the Nation are facing a difficult task in picking an all-Ameri- ca_eleven. S The task of selecting a composite foot ball tcam, representative of the country’s best, is complicated by an unusual shortage of outstanding stars. Here sre some of the leaders: West—Ernie Smith_and Raymond ckles, Southern California: Mike d. St, Mary's; Dave Nis- | bet, ton: George Sander, half- , W tate. Rockey Mountain — Frank _Christensen, fullback and Jack Johnson, tackle, Utah; Guy Martin, guard, ‘Color Bouthwest—Johniy Va sua Gyrieuan; Hurrigon = Safiorg, Tdxas, Madison Pruitt, end, Texas Cl tian. n_ Conference—Don Zimmerman, . Tulane; Fred Crawford. tackle, Pete Gracey, ~center, Vanderbil Beattie Feathers. halfback, Tennessee; Jim Hiteheock. balfback, Auburn. Big Six_Lawrence Elv. center, Nebraska: ai Dougal Russell, halfback, Kan: e Paul | George Sauer, Young, center. Oklahoms. Big " Newman, end, and Roy Horstmann. fullback, Purdue yan Williamson. end, Michigan: Gregory ._guard, Wisconsin: Gil Berry, half- Dick King, erback. Army: Sebastian. ha! v, end, Pittsburgh; | Bart Viviano, fullback, Oorrell! Cliff Mont- omery. quarterback. Columbia: Bob Chase, alfback, Brown: Bob Smith.’ guard. Col- gate: Howard Colehower. tackle, Pennsyl- | vania | At large—George Melinkovich, fullback. urth. tackle. Notre Dame: Bob . halfback. Michigan Stat ger. center, Marquette; Myers. Dakota State. HOW I?ZERS WILL FETE |8ixth Annual Dinner Is Slated Sat- urday at Grubb’s Home. The Howiizer Giants base ball club will hold its sixth annual dinner Sat- | urday night at 8 o'clock in the home | of Manager Brooke Grubb, All vplayers snd friends of the club |are invited. There will be entertain- | ment features. o - £ PLAY FOUR CUE TILTS. In the young players’ class in the Arcadia billiards tournament last night Jack Simms defeated Al McGowan, 50 to 21, and Earl Levitin downed Martin uniform. He was given a tremendous ova- tion as he trotted into the game. His signal was called; he was given the ball; then the Iowa line opened and the 1931 All-American halfback scored the touchdown standing up. Rentner left the game ecfter that cne pigy to receive for the last time the plaudits of his supporters. But hee should | | Drain, 50 to 46. Robert Barnes van- | quished Joseph Cannon, 75 to 40, and | Frank Baker scored over E. Moyer, 75 TAX MAY HIT RACING. | BALTIMORE, November | officials and the State's Special Tax Investigation Commititee are seriously considering & 10 per cent fax on all money distributed as winni by the pari-mutuel machines at the Tace tracks, it has been learned. : | 23.—State | NOTABLES 10 SEE GRIDIRON CLASSIC {Lord and Lady Astor to Be Among Fans as Cavaliers Battle Tarheels. Special Dispatch to The Star. —When Virginia and North Carolina clash in their annual battle tomorrow there will be an unusual array of notables among the spectators. Not since 1928, when Presi- dent and Mrs. Coolidge were present, have so many notables been among the gathering. Lord and Lady Astor will have seats in the president’s box along with the heads of the two universities, President F. Graham of North Carolina and act- ing President John Lloyd Newcomb of Virginia. The son of Gov. Gardner of North Carolina is substitute center on the Tarheels varsity and it is expected that he will play. Last night Fritz Kreisler, the inter- nationall celebrated violinist, gave a concart at the university and tonight ;ilnd tomorrow night dances are to be eld. HEN the final whistle is blown to- morrow marking the close of the grid game, eleven Cavaliers will have played their last varsity foot ball | for Virginia. 8ix of these men, how- ever, will be seen in other varsity con- tests throughout the year. Among those completing their grid careers are Capt. Relss, all-Virginia center for two years; Buck Poss and Chris Tompkins, linesmen; Ward Brewer, Henry Sackett, | Bill Edgar, Gene Stevens, Bill Pinder and Frank Sippley, backs, and Bill 8t. | Clair and Bill Condon, ends. _Reiss later will be scen defending his light heavyweight Southern Confer- ence title which he won last year; Tompkins and Sackett will be on the track squad, and Brewer and Poss will {orm the ace batteries of the base ball eam. Stevens will take part in the Virginia Players and Glee Club productions. 'GIRL HOCKEY STARS ON SELECTED TEAM| |Five Schools Are Honored, With Five Places Being Awarded to Madeira Players. 'IVE schools were honored in the final tryout for the Washington inter- private school honorary hockey |team, held yesterday on the National Cathedral fleld. Madeira School gained five places on the combination, Mount Vernon Seminary two, Holton Arms School four. National Cathedral School and Friends each had & player picked as a substitute. The first team follows: Stokeley, Madeira, left wing; Gilbert, Madeira, left inner; Hedbe: Mount Verncn, center forward; Johnson Hol- ton Arms, right inner; Aker, Holton Arms, right wing; Bemis, Madeira, left half; Field. Mount Vernon, center half McKenna, Ho'ton Arms, right half; Evans, Madeira. left full; Phelps. Ma- defra, right full and Maddox, Holton Arms, goal Substitutes selected were: Foster, Madeira, center forward; Nationl Gatnedrat. right. wink, and af A 3 t , and er, Friends, right full. Pro Hockey National League. Detroit Red Wings, 4; Montreal | Canadiens. 2. New York Americans, 5; Montreal | Maroons, 2. Boston, 5; Chicago, 1. COLLEGE FOOT BALL. North Texas Teachers, 6; San Marcos ‘Teachers, 0. . Al NIVERSITY, Va., November 23. )N 7/ TOPNOTCH SCHOOL TEAMS TO FINKSH Tech and Georgetown Prep Travel for Their Final Games Tomorrow. CE foot ball teams of the Distriet scholastic whirl wind up their ceason tomorrow. Tech, which garnered the public high school champlonship for the fifth straight year, and Georgetown Prep, which has swept through the campaign undefeated and untled, will appear for the last time, both on out-of-town gridirons. Tech will engage the Charlottesville School for Boys, more commonly known as the Charlottesville Fives, at Char- lottesville and Georgetown Prep has an engagement with Iona Prep at New Rochelle, N. Y. Except for a loss suffered by its re- serves to the National Training Schocl eleven, McKinley's record for the cam- paign comprises only victories. Tech | will play tomorrow morning and with its opponents will bs guests in the afternoon at the Virginia-North Caro- lina game. National Training School's gridders, | who have done well, will meet the Brockland Boys Club 150-pound cieven on the former's gridiron on Biadens- burg road tomorrow at 2 o'clock. The | teams fought to a tie earlier in the| campaign and another red-hot game is | expected. The Brookland cleven now is | deadlecked for the 150-pound title in| the Independent League. Gonzaga and Western elevens battle this afterncon in the latter's stadium at 3:30 o'clock. It is the final game of the campaign for both. ASTERN'S only regret of the recent foot ball season was its defeat by Tezh, but “we’ll get 'em next year,” | Chief Guyon, popular coach at the Lin- | co'n Park school, told the gathering| that assembled last night for the annual | dinner in honor of the grid squad at Eastern. . Dutch Bergman, Catholic University director of athletics and head foot ball coach, the main speaker, told of the value of athletics in the educational system. Mike Kelley, basket ball and track coach, referred to the fine record of Eastern athletic teams for 1932, East- ern won the basket ball title, finished in a triple tie with Central and Western in the base ball series and was runner- up in track and foot ball. Pnnm cipal Charles Hart welcomed the uests., Bergman nted letters to these Eastern gridders: Joe Aronoff, Joe How- ard, Dick Absher, Tom Nolan, Joe Mills, Jim Thompson, Tom Davis, Bob Weir- | schem. Eddie Benjamin, Morris Wolfe, | Joe Keegin, Capt. Bob Campbell and | Lewis and Coughlin. Manager Ken Wiblitzhauser also got the insignia. St. Albans eleven ended its campaign with a 12-0 win over Priends School | eleven. Cornwell scored in the first| quarter and Lorton in the third. Line-ups and summary: Friends (0). Position. St. Albans (12). i, L E. . Beard NIEDIRAS W EEIOF O 0o 0 16 0 6 012 Albans_Cornwell. Lor- ton. Bubstitutions: St. Albans—whitiock, Liffert. Bachmann. C. Henderson. Conner, | Morris. Piniay. Lowe. Friends—Clark, Gra- ham. Referee—Mr. Jones. Foot Ball Tips BY JOE GLASS. ITTSBURGH'S triple buck is one of the best of this sort of plays. Its strength lies in the fact that it can very easily confusc the sec- ondary defense in a way that will give the ball ca'gier real grcund- gaining opportunity if he succeeds in getting through the line of scrim- mage. “The ball is snapped to 2. He goes right, then passes to 1, who runs left. Passing 4, 1 gives him the ball. Both 2 and 1 continue running. These two feints are calculated to 0— 0 Touchdowns: St | draw the deep defensive backs out- side. However, 1 now blocks the in- coming right defensive end and 2 blocks the incoming left defensive tackle, with 4 rmashing straight through center. e hole is opened by 7 and 8, who double-block the opposing center, and center and 9, who do the same thing with the de- fensive right guard. A well-conceived detail is the as- signments of 5 and 10. These block out the close-up defensive backs. No. 3 attends to the defensive right tackle. The defensive left end is not apt to figure in the play. B COLUMBIA KEEPS LITTLE Grid Coach Signed “for Period of Years” With Pay Shave. NEW YORK, Ncvember 23 (#)—Dr. Edward 8. Elliott, director of athletics at Columbia, has announced that Lou Little, head foot ball coach of the Lions since 1929, has signed & new contract “for a further period of years.” It has been known.for some time that Little had signed a new contract for three years at probably $15,000 a university officials and Little to confirm it until after the ml‘lt“t}e'?‘ muury nforming to the new , CO) e times, Is a reduction of $3,500 a year. BOWIE RACES Nov. 14 to Nov. 29, Inc. peci 12th and New York Ave. N.! 11:20, 11:35, 11:50 a.m. and 12: year, but declined 12:15, 12:30 and 1:00 p.m. Direct to Grandstand First Race 1:00 P.M. College, School Foot Ball Tilts COLLEGE. ‘TomorTow. George Washington vs. Oklahoma, Griffith Stadium, 2 o'clock. Maryland vs. Johns-Hopkins, Bal- timore Stadium, 2 o'clock. Howard vs. Lincoln, Howard Sta- dium, 1:30 o'clock. Saturday. Catholic Unlversity vs. Loyola (Baltimore), Grifith Stadium, 2:15 o'clock. SCHOLASTIC. Today. Gonzaga vs. Western, Stadium, 3:30 o'clock. ‘Tomorrow. ‘Tech vs. Charlottesville School for Boys, at Charlottesvile. Georgetown Prep vs. Iona Prep, at New Rochelle, N. Y. National Training School vs. Brook- land Boys' Club, N. T. S. PFleld, 2 o'clock, Western Friday. Central vs. Petersburg High at Petersburg, Va. Loyola Stronger For C. U. Contest BALTIMORE, November 23.—The rain and mud of last Saturday may not have been good for some foot ball teams, but it really has helped Loy- ola Ccllege quite a lot. It gave the Greyhounds a chance to get all injured players in top form for the big game with Catholic gnivermy in Washington on Satur- ay. Then, too, it permitted Tony Com- erford, Loyola coach, more time to drill Chris Kamka in the intricacies of the quarterback job, which role he will play against C. U. Kamka Jllyed fullback at City College and was listed as one out at Evergreen, but he showed Comerford enough to warrant getting a trial at quarter, and now that's the job he will hold down. This move finds Vince Carlin going back to his halfback job. Distributor Daniel Loughran Co., Inc. 1311 H St. N.W. ‘Washington, D. C. Phonee: Natl 0391 and 1256 SPORTS Foot Ball Team Has Kaleidoscopic Career Columnist Bill Corum Lauds Base Ball Missionary Plan BY TOM DOERER. policy.” ILL CORUM, sports columnist of | % the New York Evening Journal, McGraw, as quoted yesterday, belleves that the writer's sug- | clared further that he believed de- eeded a stimull d that the o game n a ulant, an gestion in the sports section of | [lan” sugpested in The Evening Star lest Saturday’s Evening Star which! was probably the answer. | called for employing of bace balls for- | “"A1 indlcations at. present point to | mer stars to do missionary work for the | the plan being broached at the Winter game to be “first rate.” meeting, in December, bsfore But Willlam E. Benswanger, owner of | Jeagues and at the joint . the Pitisburgh Birates of the National | Griheh of the loeal save bell oab League, desires that the plan be more | the thought well enough to sponsor fully explained before ing his |at his league's confab. opinion, and wires that existing condi- = tions in base ball, undoubtedly refer- T ring to financial ones, are to be given| consideration. ARMY-NAVY IN SELLOUT Corum, however, like John J. McGras | of the Gfants, Jacob Ruppert of me‘All 78,000 Tickets for Philadelphia Yankees, Bob Quinn of the Red Sox, | Game December 8 Gone. Ed rrow of tha Yanks and Clark th of the Senators, visualizes the| ANNAPOLIS, November 23.—A final -uggu:lgg;u:elv to the game. | rush cf applications for tickets, follow- % . ;lng Navy's spirited showing against | Notre Dame, has resulted in & complete “Think that your suggestion that organized base ball take care of 15 | sellout for the Army-Navy foot ball clash on Franklin Fleld, in Philadel- others, every consideration that is commensurate with sound business former stars by employing them to | phia, do missionary work among college and sandlot players to be first rate, and tha t woul eventually pay base ball dividends. Also that the | foURCed, by, Capt, & W Wileow ¥t game owes former luminaries of the |athietics.” He sald 0 further apphca- sport, such as Wilbert Robinson, Te- | yons can be honared. cently of the Dodgers; Walter John- | “'progpective weather and economic son, Ty Ccbb, George Sisler and |congitions have had no effect on the | demand for tickets, which has been on |a par, if not in excess, of prosperity lods, Capt. Wil - Mat Matches ek Field Boids 78.000. By the Associated Press. FEED FOR COLONIALS. NEW YORK—Sam Stein. 202, New- George Washington University’s an- ark, threw Mike Romano, 205, Italy, 15 | nual foot ball banquet will be held seconds. December 14 at the Mayflower. Letters will be awarded. Tickets for the func- tion are on sale at the G. W. athletic office, 2010 H street. Fistic Battles SAUTO Mt § NATIONAL | By the Associated Press. | LOS ANGELES.—Baby _Arizmendi, Mexico, and Varias Milling, Philippines, draw (10); Solly Kreiger, New York | outpcinted " Sid _ Grigry, Wilmington, Calif. (4); Chalky Wright, San Ber» nardino, outpointed Al Greenfield, Chi- | | cago (4). SERVICE €O. INC. 1622-24 4=STNW- NORTH-0051 “WHY.. UH-H" gets you into more trouble than you can smoke WHEN you open the conversation at the cigar counter with a “WHY .. UH-H,” your taste has learned to be suspicious of the result. Most five cent cigars get off to a smooth start but they sort of “burn out a bearing” before you finish. They just miss being good enough to take on for another lap. And that’s where New Bachelor passes all your expectations of the ideal five cent cigar. It is so cool and smooth and refreshing that you just coast along from one New Bachelor to an- other. When you turn to New Bachelor you’ll find the open road to smoking pleasure—with no detours. It’s the blend that sends you back for more.

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