It was all that reading. My brotherâ€"inâ€"law, Jack. Buell, brought along on a visit some o 1d of the night, barely stopping for food and drink deciphering the names under the photos. There we were, in the late 1930‘s, looking so young and sweet and innocent it would make your eyes water. One picture was headed: Unâ€" defeated Champions of Lanark County. That was a great year, I reckon. Come on, now. How. many of you have ever been on a team of Undefeated Champions of anything? . We talked and laughed a lot as we identified longâ€"forgotten faces and our wives muttered away contemptuously in the background. They .thought we were behaving like a couple of schoolâ€" boys. We were. This column is going to be a little tough to write. No, there hasn‘t been a death in the famâ€" ily. Not quite. Wls 3 But I wasn‘t too sure I wasn‘t going to bleed to death (through the eyes) when I tottered out of bed ‘at seven this morning just two hours after tottering into bed. Right in the middle of the front row, holding the ball, was Les Douglas, quarterback and team captain. He wasn‘t a big guy, but he was solid bone, muscle and grit. He could always claw his way. that extra five inches for a touchdown, through six hundred pounds of enemy flesh. fle was a great hockey player, too. Make it to fessional. But he was born twenty years too soon. There were just too many great hockâ€" ey players in those days, and he didn‘t quite make the NHL, though he lead the American Hockey League in scoring for several seasons. Today, he‘d be knocking off about $60,000 a year. ©_We‘ll wrap ice cream *© to stay freezer cold * _ ‘till you get home Flanking him in the photo were Bob White and Tom Harper. Tom could run with the ball like a rabbit with six guys shooting at him. _ _ Bob White was my best friend, through high school. He wasn‘t huge, either, but when we needed a few yards, there was no question of who would get the ball. Bob would take a plunge Sss S BASEINâ€"ROBBINS ICE CREAM STORE ©1973, BASKINâ€"RMOBBINS 50 Westmount Rd. N Open 7 Days a Week 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Want to do more shopping after you‘ve picked up a carton of your favorite flavor or a customâ€"made ice cream dessert? Or maybe it takes you hours and . hours to drive home. Don‘t worry. We‘ll pack your purâ€" chase in dry ice and it‘ll stay freezer cold and perfect all the way. Just ask. * WESTMOUNT PLACE Shopping Centre (Inside Mau) 742â€"1501 A _AAA Ada18 111 1 A 4 % 5 21501 _ _ _ e V . *# ‘ e‘y . $ Smiley WATERLOO at anything the size of a doughnut hole, and alâ€" ways come up with the necessary yards. â€" We all hated school, except for the sports, but Bob White was bright. Today, he‘d be going to college and becoming an engineer, or someâ€" thing equally useless. But in those days, there was no way. No students‘ loans, no grants, and dang few affluent parents. If you got a job in a factory, you were lucky. ‘ Last time I saw Bob was in London, England, during the war. It was in the lobby of the famous, out, I was checking in. Hello and goodbye. He had completed one tour of operations on bombâ€" ers and was about to begin his second. On which he was killed. Beside Bob in the picture was Johnny Hogg. A nice guy, who was forced by his parents to maintain a much higher standard of. intellectual and cultural life than the rest of us poolroom bums. He played the violin. He passed his subâ€" jects. He was a cleanâ€"living, goodâ€"looking lad, just the type you‘d want for yourself, though he _ 4 o~,, x'westmount place WE §>§\‘ pharmacy s1sâ€"seo0o DELIVER l Westmount Place Shopping Centre, Waterloo Monday to Saturday 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Open Holidays 11 a.m. to 9 p.mâ€". A long, long time ‘ OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK WE DELIVER westmount place â€"â€" pharmacy _ 578â€"8800 } had a distressing habit of dropping crucial punts. Then there was Les Morris, a boy with a terriâ€" ble home life, a terrible birthmark, and a perâ€" sonality to go with both. But he was also a terâ€" rible, terrifying tackler, who could hit a fancyâ€" dancy halfback so hard that the guy didn‘t know he‘d been amputated at the knees until he tried to stand up. ‘ / As I heard it later, they found Johnny lying in a rubber dinghy in the Mediterranean. Dead. He‘d been shot down, wounded, parachuted, got into the dinghy. and died. ‘ And Norm Davis. He had the speed of a gaâ€" zelle, and the grace of a gnu. He didn‘t come back from the war either. There were quite a few more, but Old Jack, my brotherâ€"inâ€"law ~and myself,â€" didn‘t belabour the tragic theme. We laughed until we were purâ€" ple in the face at all the things we had got away with, not all the things that had got away with so many of us. â€"