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a t q i i i i 4 | starting call with Johnny Abbott at QUINT WILL BATTLE FIRST CLASS A FOE Imps-Hazen Preliminary Will Start at 7 P. M.; Large Crowd Expected CLAUSNITZER WILL BE OUT Rognstad’s Conquerors of Grafton Are Good Ball Club, Hanna Reports Valley City’s Hi-Liners, undefeated fn state prep competition and con- querors of Grafton’s defending Class A champions, invade Bismarck Fri- day night for a clash with Coach Glenn Hanna's Demons. The game, pitting two of the state's ranking contenders for tournament honors, is expected to draw a large crowd to Bismarck high school’s new gymnasium, which recently has been fitted out with two new sets of bleach- ers to accommodate the basketball fans. A preliminary game between the Imps and Hazen will be called prompt- ly at 7 p. m, with the main cage battle slated to start at 8 o'clock. In the afternoon, the Demon hockey six will play the Hi-Liners at the rink north of the high school. The game will start at 3:30 p. m. : . Hi-Liners Are Strong Hanna, who scouted the Valley City Quint when they played a team of| @lumni stars during the Christmas vacation, reports that Joe Rognstas| hhas a classy squad of expert ball hand-/ ers, good shots and fine defensive performers. The Hi-Liners single loss of the sea- fon was received at the hands of Edt- gon high, Minneapolis, defending Twin City champions. The Demons will be without the ser- vices of Helmuth Clausnitzer, speedy junior forward, who got blood poison- ing in his knee during the holidays. “Peck” McGuiness, center, is also Nursing an injured knee but will start in Friday’s game. Ray Yeasley will probably get the the forward berths with Bob Peter- son and either Buddy Beall or “Fat” | ¢, Blofson working in the back court. Guards Show Up Well Beall and Elofson have waged a UNBEATEN BISMARCK ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, alley City Cage, Puck Teams Inva THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1986 LAST JUMP I a feds ’ Billiard Rivals i eo The champion, left, of San Willie thr cago, is 1 three - Hoppe, 18.1 balkline champion, right, in defense of his crown in a y tournament n. 9-11, «2 balkline title holder. cushion Welker Francisco, of New in Cochran billtard Cochran, meets York, Chis also Capital Commercial Quint Beats Regulatory Department, 35-10 Standings Co. A Turns Back | Capitol Theatre College} L Pet. Klein’s Toggery.. 7 1 875 Company A. 5 2 44 Paramount 5 3 625 Piggly-Wiggly ... 4 2 667 Capital Com. 3 3.500 Capitol Theatre 1 1 500 K. C... . 3 5 35 Regulatory Dept.. 1 q 1 Capitol Theatre cagers put up a de-| termined fight before bowing to Com- pany A’s second-place quint in the City League Tuesday night. score was 33-32, decided in the last few mintues of play. P In the second game played, the apital Commercial College breezed through to an easy 35-10 victory over the Regulatory Department five. Vernon Hedstrom, Leon Doerner, The | tight scrap all season to see who will} Becker and Hank Brown all partici- | get the regular guard assignment and | pated in the scoring for the soldiers both»have shown up well in practice| with Hedstrom tying Asselstine of the this week. Jack Bowers is almost cer-| Capitol Theatre for high scoring hop- - tain to see action at one forward post.!ors. Each of the two forwards bagged Friday's game will be the Demons’ | five field goals for 10 points, Aichele | first test against a Class A opponent|and Enge were other outstanding i | window, Hanna said. During the week ' a ticket sales campaign has been con-|seven baskets from the floor and | ducted at the high school with good|made good one try at the free throw line, the commercial college five had q i i # As. ) results. | Mike Belloise Wins 5 Eliminatio: marks the first time in major league; mn Battle baseball history that a whole clun manager down to the lowest paid ; jar received a pay boost at one “feet with Illinois to find a feather- |} weight champion is Mike Belloise of|~ the Bronx. Wednesday night when 4 stopped Claude Varner of Cali- in the 13th round of their 15 ‘nd Capital City fans are taking {performers in the newly - organized! dig interest in the game. Season tick-|theatre team, which has played only | ets for adults will be on sale at the}two league games. Paced by Swenson, who tossed in Seating capacity at the new gym-|no trouble defeating the regulatory ‘and along one half of the south wall Red-Haired Patty Berg! - Not Victim of Temper Miami, Fla, Jan. 9.—(#)—Patty Berg may be red-headed, but that @oesn’t mean she gets irate out on the fairways and breaks her golf ‘Temper, the 17-year-old Minneapo- iis girl said Thursday, decidedly is not ® part of the game that carried her to the finals of the last women’s na- tional amateur tournament. “I don't see anything in golf to get excited about,” she remarked, with cool philosophy contestants twice and thrice her age might envy. “If I play ‘well, I play well. It’s just there. If Z'm bad, I'm bad.” _. Defeated veteran Glenna Collett Vare, the piotd rising star of woman's golf is point. crack at the title. New York, Jan. 9—(?)\—New York's in the cooperative tourna- Belloise won the part of the double barreled elimination tournament spon- ‘mored by the New York state athletic ~ The victory qualified him to meet Rightmire of Sioux City. Towa, winner of Chicago's part one of the eliminations. Whoever comes out ahead in their clash will be /matched with Baby Arizmendi of ‘Mexico for the title. | ” “The New York and Mlinois commis- | gions lifted the crown off the head of (Freddie Miller of Cincinnati some ‘Aime ago for his failure to defend the title in the United States. - Foxx Signs Contract Ending Holdout Talk New York, Jan. 9.—()—The Boston Red Sox have settled in a simple man- | mer one problem that threatened to | be a severe headache to Owner | Tom Yawkey and Business Manager \ Eddie Collins. They tore up Jimmie Foxx’s oi: eontract, which still had two years fe run. signed him to a new one- document reputedly at a some- higher salary, and hushed the of @ holdout that might have @ serious effect on the club. efore the Athletics sold him to on, Foxx had announced he would nd a.bigher salary if traded. He into the fold after a brief con- ce in Yawkey’s office here Wed- day, acospting. a reported figure f 925,000 instead of the $17,500 he day. for 1936. in salary next Ame, fasium has been nearly doubled by|quint. The summaries: the addition of bleachers on the stage season, figures, Reg. Dept. fg ft pf Com. Col. fg ft pf Thorson 1 0 1 Temanson 2 0 0 Hempel oo Bailey 300 Welch 10 Huber 242 Fisher ia ae . oe Thiegs 14 + 0 Hough i 8 0 0 _— 0 Totals 4 2 Co. A fe ft Hedstrom 5 0 1 Becker 322 Doerner 42 y, H. Brown 2 2 2 1 Beer 00 0 Lt Potter O:a 2 4] Totals 14 8 Totals 12 8 8| .. , Entire Cub Roster Given Boost in Pay Chicago, Jan. 9.—(#)/—The Big Wrigley bankroll, once the pride and Joy of the winter ivory marts, caused 3 and 2, in last year's final|® Celebration at all winter head- “Anterlachen, her home. course, by|@Warters of the Chicago Cubs Thurs- Instead of being used to buy a to sharpen her game for an-|Player at five or six Patty is|famous bankroll was being peeled to t-forward and very much to|8ive every one of 23 Cubs a pay boost the Owner Phil K. Wrigley announced |. all his players would receive a raise It probably NU. S. TOURNEY 60-Year-Old Carl Ek Will Retire After National Event at Red Wing Red Wing, Minn., Jan. 9.—(#)—Carl Ek, national champion skier, “way back when,” will make his last Jump as he goes down the huge slide of the Aurora ski club in the nationai tournament here Feb. 1 and 2. this sort of thing,” sighed the 60- sure wish I could.” another 10 years but an injury re- Mich., 38 years ago “has been act- ing up on me, and when I land at the bottom of the chute in my last ap- pearance my only hope is that I'll be standing.” Years ago when he captured the national title he was rated as one one of the most graceful skiers in the United States, and at present he is one of he oldest active riders in the country. “My first pair of skis,” he recalled, “was made by my father out of bar- rel staves,” He has in his possession medals, pennants, cups and other various honors for winning contests sufficient to fill three large trunks. Committees in charge of the cele- bration, which will mark the golden jubilee of the Aurora club, the old- est skiing organization in the coun- try, have made elaborate plans for the two day national event. While skiing headlines the bill, the program also calis for fancy and clown skating, a dog sled derby, a cross- country ski race, and tournament ball, where the United States ski queen will be crowned. Bismarck Tribune and Highway Department bowlers won two out of three games each from the First Na- tional Bank and Bismarck Bakery, respectively, in Commercial League matches rolled Wednesday night. 201-177-174—552, Pete Verduin for the ‘Bakery annexed single and three jgame honors with Joe Schlosser for ithe Highwaymen coming through with counts of 189-173-172—534, the 42- 42- 42— + 806-885-833—2524 Handicap 126 Totals... First National Bank Hanson 109-124-119— 352 Boese .. 162-154-172— 488 Samuelson . 120-104-148— 372 Lawyer . 115-112-115— 342 Dummy 125-125-125— 375 Handicap .. 66- 66- 66— 198 Moeller Ottum ... MacGregor . Devlin 134-148-147— 429 159-117-173— 449 124-144-136— 404 156-145-141— 442 721-690-718—2129 | Fights Last Night (By the Associated Press) New York—Mike Belloise, 124, New York, stopped Claude Var- ner 125%, California (13). “A fellow just can’t go on doing year old nationally-known figure as he thought over his 52 years as a member of Red Wing clubs. “But I Ek said he felt he could ski for ceived in a tournament at Ishpeming, Toppling the maples for counts of| 4: second best totals. The scores: is Bismarck Bakery { Verduin .. ++ 201-177-174— 552 Baker .. 166-163-149— 478 | * Faubel . 199-170-141— 510) Dummy 146-146-146— 438 Patera ... 163-169-157— 494 Totals........ 880-825-767—2472 | Highway Department Mannerow . ++ 133-160-169— 462 Olson .. 133-158-172— 463 Berg 194-184-151— 529 Rohrer . 115-168-127— 410 Schlosser . 189-173-172— 534 Totals. . +» 697-685-745—2127 ribune | Hauch ... ++ 148-136-121— 405 1° Fa Wins Stamped as Title Contenders Assume N. D. Lead After Beat- ing 3 Class A Quints During Holidays A record of seven consecutive vic- tories stamped Wahpeton high school as an outstanding contender in the 1936 race for the state basketball championship, assuming the lead among five undefeated class A quints. After four early season wins, Wahpeton swept through three class A opponents since the holiday season to better records of consecutive wins established by four other teams, Also undefeated are Dickinson in six games, Grand Forks five, Bismarck three, and Fargo two. Jamestown was edged out of the unbeaten column last week by a crew of alumni stars that scored a 26-25 victory. Previously tied with Grand Forks at 5-all, Dickinson forged into sec- ond position with a sixth conquest while the Forkers idled through the holidays. . Grand Forks also lost its high scor- ing honors, Wahpeton’s mark of 274{ points exceeding by 63 points the to- tal of Grand Forks, Thursday night Wahpeton. will strive to lengthen its winning streak against a fighting quint from Fergus Falls, Minn. Jntra-class A games Priday are Valley City at Bismarck, Williston at Minot and Grafton at Devils Lake, Valley City moves over to Mandan! Saturday. Other major games this week-end include Glendive, Mont., at Dickinson and Aneta at Grand Forks Friday; Detroit Lakes, Minn., at Fargo, Minot at Rugby, and Jamestown at St. Mary's Bismarck Saturday. Jimmies Defeat Cobbers, 42-28 Manney and Westby Divide! Scoring Honors With 10 | Points Apiece Jamestown, N. D., i Jan, 9.—(P)— Jamestown college applied second half| pressure Wednesday night to defeat the Concordia basketball team, play- ing without Larry Schneider, center, 2-28. The Jimmies led by only 16- }complexion and skin of a girl ard no Jone could ,Home,” “Paddle Your Own Canoe,’ ‘IN ‘GOOD OLD DAYS | Labeled ‘the Beaut’ Because He Had Best Ténor Voice on East Side New York, Jan. 9. (NEA)—There jare several versions of how Joseph announcers, was tagged “the Beaut.” The most popular is that Humph- reys was so labeled when, as a bar- tender in his teens, he drove a bar {fly through a plate-glass window ‘with @ well-directed right when told to “chalk the drinks on the sole of your shoe, m’lad, and walk ’em off.” The fact is, however, that Joe Humphreys was called “the Beaut” because he was good-looking and Fourth Ward of New York's lower East Side. Joe the Beaut had the sing “Maggie Murphy's and “As We Drink From Our Pint of Beer” quite as well as he. He led all quartets, and became quite a card at smokers. An orphan at 10, bootblack, news- boy, and a page in Wall Street, little Joc Humphreys first came in direct contact with boxing as a mascot of the old Nonpareil Athletic club, sit- uated over a stable in Oliver Street, in the late 80's, At 15 he was a bar- tender at the. corner of Park Row and Chambers Streets. Later he pour- ed at Mike Menden’s near Daly’s Theatre; Minden’s at Broadway Ferry; Edward Humphreys, daddy of sports; possessed the best tenor voice in ea i | { \ | i GRR AT’ RING FIGURE | OUR BOARDING HOUSE | WAS HANDSOME MAN | [27 BAH To BANKS / HME TL, WENT TO OUR NEIGBORHOOD | COUNTING HOUSE AND SET BEFORE THEM THE DETAILS OF MY ELECTRIC LIGHT INVENTION- | ou \NHY~UMP-F SPUTT ‘\ THERES MILLIONS IN THE IDEA: —AND,DRAT THEM, IN THEIR, USUAL SHORTSIGHTEDNESS AND LACK OF IMAGINATION THEY REFUSED) A NEw TO PUTH25000 IN MYSCALENDAR 2¢ IN ANOTHER Je BANK! MARVELOUS Negeametbate : ms UNREASON- ABLE TWAT WAY, MASOR ! l- GZ WELL,THAT ¥ WHY, YOUVE GIVES You A. ) REDUCED GOOD PouT / YSELF To FOR NOT 3 PANHANDUNG, | DOING IN THEIR $F BUSINESS EYES — ase §, YOU USED ae X TO ASK TOR NOU CAN ) A MILLION! ASK FoR : n de Demon Lair Friday - Political Turn Gave Joe Humphreys Chance to Become Top Announcer VETERAN SKI RIDER TO MAKE _ | Wops With Seven “OUR B By Ahern Sports Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ and at the White Light, next door to the Red Light, on Seventh Avenue, just off 23rd Street. Loudest Voice Lands the Job Humphreys broke in as an an- nouncer when he was 18 at a show arranged for the purpose of raising $250 for Nigger Tom Welch, a white! man of bad habits who hung around the New York Produce Exchange, where Joe the Beaut paged brokers. “Drinking was one of Nigger Tom Welch's bad habits,” says Humphreys. “One night he hit one Hans Peter- sen and broke his jaw. They put Nig- ger Tom in jail. It looked tough for him, and Petersen said it could be squared for $250; that he wouldn’t appear against him if he got that amount. We all thought a lot of Nig- ger Tom so we arranged a benefit at Gus Maisch’s (The Dutchman's) Lit- 14 at half time. The score: ¢ Concordia ie f pf} 1 1 at 4} ah = 144 Officials—Joe Te Hi Tom Scott, Pittsbu: Dickinson Peds Open 36 Basketball Slate |, Dickinson, N. D., Jan. 9.—(?)—Fol- lowing two weeks of vacation Dickin- son State Teachers college will ti to the floor tonight against the Ft esters basketball team from Bottineau. The game precedes a mecting of coaches, players and referees from the Slope district Thursday night for an interpretation of the new rules that govern basketball. é Glenn Eye, Miles City, Mont., who will referee the Savages-Foresters game, will direct the discussion and explain any rules that may at the |present time be misinterpreted. Last Foreign Threat Remains in Net Meet Coral Gables, Fla., Jan. 9.—(7)-- Only one foreign netman remained jin the singles division as the Miami Biltmore tennis tournament advanced Thursday to quarter finals play. He was Jack Reitman, Montreal, Canada, {who faces Weston Pinter, unseeded Minneapolis entry, in one of four third round matches left over from Wed- nesday. ee ’ {a g {>was understood to have received fron & I. mn OUT OUR WAY é 2] By Williams WHERE DOES HE GET TH’ MONEY To BUY EXPENSIVE CONTRAPTIONS LIKE THAT ? YOU SHOULD FIND OUT, BEFORE YOU GO KEEPIN COMPANY WITH A FELLER WITH HANDS 4S SOFT AND WHITE AS LILLIES! HE DOESN'T WORK~ SO WHER: DOES HE GET ALL THIS Z ag HY gk ss oem TY PA'S RIGHT. ELLEN! You - SHOULD KNOW \ WHERE TH’ MONEY E COMES FROM! TH MONEY HES SPENDIN’ON YOu +/\ MAY COME FROM E GAMBLIN~ THINK OF THAT! Mititgi pens, VEY | Demosthenes of the Bowery, and Si!- tle Casino, a combination beer garden, shooting gallery, and honky-tonk in New Bowery. “Good old Charley Harvey was the top announcer of the period. He was invited and so were Fred Burns, the r-Tongue John Parnell Dunn, but none of them showed up. I got the job because I had the loudest voice.” Joe Humphreys, now 63, has been in the announcing business, as he calls it, from that night to this, but did not get a break in the line that made him famous until several years ter. Good Democrat Gets Break Charley Harvey and his handle-bar mustache held forth at the old Broad- way A. C., on Broadway near Eighth Avenue, then the fountain head of the beak-busting bysiness. Harvey was a Republican. ’ Young Humphreys worked hard for Big Tim Sullivan and Tammany i: an election in the late 90’s. When tt was time to reward him, the Beaut would accept no money, “We've got to do something for the Beaut,” said a Sullivan lieutenant. “He'd rather announce than bs president,” remarked another. “Why not toss out that Republican, Har- vey, and put him in at the Broad- way?” Joe Humphreys was installed at the Breadway A. C. without delay, ana thus really began the spectacular career of sport’s most celebrated mouthpiece. Humphreys has seen more fighters in action than any other man who ever lived. In 45 years of announcing he has introduced the principals in fully 20,000 battles. He has held aloft the hand of every heavyweight cham- pion from John L. Sullivan to James J. Braddock, Humphreys’ stentorian voice has been heard by more people than there are in the United States. Hundreds of thousands have waited breathlessly as he collected the slips of referees and judges, and walked to the lucky corner to hoist a mighty right fist and shout, “Thuh Win-nah!” Olympic Team Made Good Will Emissaries Chicago, Jan. 9.—()—Americans competing in the Olympic games in Germany will be reminded by Avery Brundage, president of the American Olympic committee, that they will be expected to do their utmost to pro- mote good will for this nation abgoad. “Americans generally,” said Brund- age in a letter mailed to every mem- ber of the American winter Olympiz team, “with their free and independ- ent ideas, have the reputation of be- ing less amenable to discipline than any other nationals. “Please respect the rights of others and observe the rules and regulations set down to insure the comfort, hap- piness and success of all. You have @ great opportunity to build up inter- national good will for the United States.” ¢ BOTTINEAU SIX WINS Minot, N. D., Jan. 9.—(?)—The hard-driving Bottineau flyers scored @ 4-1 hockey victory over the Minot Tigers in a fast game here Wednesday. Bottineau counted twice before Minot tallied its goal in the first period, and the invading sextet scored once in each of the remaining sessions. Between one-thirteenth and ons- New York, Jan. 9.—()—Can scarce- ly blame the tennisers for enlisting under the Bill O’Brien banner... . They get good dough... . Which is what most of us are after. For instance, Jane Sharp will collect $150 each week and O’Brien will feed her ... Mrs. Ethel Burkhardt Arnold gets $300 a weck, but must buy her own cakes. Berkeley Bell will be paid $500 a week flat... . Bruce Barnes, the Texan, gets $250 per... . Both feed themselves. . . . Each indi- vidual must take care of his or her hotel bill, but O’Brien stands for all traveling expenses. - The big shots are George Lott, Les- ter Stoefen and Ellsworth Vines... . Lott and Stcefen each recefve 12% per cent of the gate... . Last year jit netted them better than $20,000 each. ... Vines rated 20 per cent of the gate and so made considerably more, .. . What is left is split 50-50 between Big Bill Tilden and O'Brien. ... They made plenty, too. Othcr tennis news: A move is on to play the American sone Davis cup matches between Aus- tralia and the United States in California. .°.. George Lott agrees with Mrs, Helen Wills Moocdy that the U. S. will regain the historic cup. . . . Lott figures Willmer Allison will have the best year of his career... . And that he'll get plenty of help from Oakland Don Budge. Bryan Grant, the midget Atlantan, looks like a sure bet to make the trip to Wimbledon, and the odds are Gene Mako will be dropped. . . . Too temperamental. .. . Allison and Johnny Van Ryn will take care of the doubles again. ... You can bet your last dollar Mrs. Moody will be back in the thick of things. Connie Mack got between $300,- 000 and $500,000 from the Red Sox for Foxx, McNair, Cramer and Marcum—in addition to players, Joe Savoldi has been suspended in New Yerk for conduct unbe- coming a wrestler. ... How could he be? ... Nat Fleischer, editor of The Ring, leaves in a week to look over the boxing situations in South American countries. Joe Louis says he won't mess around any longer than necessary with Charlie Retzlaff when they cross knuckles in Chicago, a week from Friday... . The fellow driving that dust-covered flivver down Broadway Wednesday was Bill Tilden, just in from the coast for the pro tennis tous. i Los Angeles Open Favorites Qualify ° = ! 131 Club Weilders Will Begin Quest for Annual $5,000 Cash Prizes Los Angeles, Jan. 9.—(%)—Golf- dom’s army of gold «seekers rested Thursday before taking up their clubs in the annual $5,000 Los Angeles oe tournament which begins Pri- lay. Weary scorekeepers worked until late Wednesday night compiling the scores in the 36-hole qualifying round. All the favorites got under the wire as expected, and Friday the 89 qual- ifiers join the 42 who were exempt from the trials. On the roster are such favorites as} MacDonald Smith, and Vic Ghezzi, Deal, N. J., winner of the meet last year in a playoff with Johnny Re- volta. Rated as equal favorites are Horton Smith, and Jimmy Hines, Garden City, Long Island, Harold McSpaden, unattached, Paul Runyan, Sam Parks, Jr., national open king, Harry Cooper, Craig Wood, Leo Diegel and Olin Dutra. | Basketball Scores | ¢ Moorhead Teachers 28. Concordia 28; Jamestown college 42 SAINTS BLANK TULSA St. Paul, Jan. 9.—(#)—St. Paul held @ second place tie in the American Hockey association by dint of a 3-0 shutout of Tulsa Wednesday night. Three ‘Saints divided the scoring, Matschke counting in the second pe- riod and Pleban and Emory’ Hanson in the third. MATCH GAME CHAMP ADVISES BEGINNERS TO BE NATURAL Milwaukee, Jan. 9.—It is well for the bowling beginner to watch ex- perts and pick up pointers from them, but as soon as he gets onto the game, he should be himself and develop a style of his own. No two bowlers roll alike; every man has a particular style of delivery that just suits his build, and he naturally falls into that stride if he doesn’t concentrate on imitating someone else. In practicing proper delivery on the alley, start without a ball, about 12 jor 15 feet behind the foul line, de- pending on how many steps you need to reach the alley corner. After you have determined the number of steps suitable to your stride, get a ball and stand erect on the approach to the alley at the dis- tance previously found suitable. Let the weight of the ball rest on the left hand. Take a firm grip on the sphere, but do not squeeze to the extent of cramping your hand. Do not run, but walk fast toward i the foul line, starting with the right +|foot. The ball should be delivered with the left foot in front. Bend knees as ball is released just as the hand is about 12 inches above the alley bed. DENIES HE'LL SUCCEED SPEARS Lubbock, Tex. Jan. 9—(?)}—Tom Lieb, athletic director at Loyola uni- versity, Wednesday denied reports he would succeed Dr. Clarence W. Spears as football coach at the University of Wisconsin, Choice Men’s Overcoats 20% off BUY NOW! Alex Rosen & Bro. Bismarek, N. D. ; fourteenth of the weight of the hu- [man body is blood. MONEY-BACK OFFER=~ You must be pleased” Roll yourself 30 swell cigarettes from Prince Albert. If you don’t find them the finest, tastiest roll-your-own cigarettes you ever smoked, return the pocket tin with the rest of the tobacco in it to us at any time within a month from this date, and we will refund full purchase price, plus postage. (Signed) R.J.Reynolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem,N.C, in THE EASY-TO-R FIRST, ROLL 30.CIGARETTES! Then if you decide they’re not the ideal ‘‘makin’s’’ — we return full purchase price, plus postage Now this whole question of cigarette “‘makin’s’’ shakes down to this: You roll ’em and smoke ’em for pleasure. Hence the importance of getting 100% return in enjoyment, And we have a plan that helps men to discover new mildness and flavor roll-your-own cigarettes. Here’s all you do—You simply try P.A. fairly. If not delighted, after rolling P.A. as told in our offer, your money is returned. Thus satisfaction guaranteed, Men are loud in their praises of Prince Albert... for the way it lies in the “‘makin’s” papers . for its neat, easy-rolling qualitica -and for its marvelous mild flavor, It sure smokes nice in a pipe too. RINGE ALBERT OLL JOY SMOKE