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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY _MARCH MARCH 17,1936 ___ Eddie O’Brien Rated Ba os Best Bet in 400 Meters Gibbons Decisively| PARMELEE MAY BE CARDINAL’S NECESSARY WINNING CHUCKER TEMPLETON ALONE BELIEVES EASTMAN CAN TAKE ‘DOUBLE’ Other Mentors Advise Stanford Star to Concentrate on 800-Meter Race a | WEST COAST RIVALS STRONG Ree eens iktt i Syracuse University Ace Set! World Records in 500 and 600 Meter Events New York, March 17.—(?)—With one exception, America’s leading track coaches name black-haired, long-j striding Eddie O’Brien of Atlantic) City and Syracuse university as our! “one best bet” to retain 400-meter! . footracing honors in the, forthcoming Olympic games at Berlin. The dissenter is Robert (Dink) Templeton of Stanford, not because of any skepticism of the Syracuse star's ability but because he believes his ex-pupil, blazin’ Ben Eastman, ‘will come racing down the stretch this | summer a winner in both the 400 and 800 meter Olympic championships. Only once in Olympic history has a “double” been scored in the 400 and B00. “Eastman will be better than ever,” gays Templeton. “He will qualify for both events without difficulty and run off with the Olympic championships.” Eastman Should Concentrate ‘The prospect may be intriguing but | other coaches think Eastman’s best course is to concentrate on the 809, particularly as America already is so well fortified tor the shorter dis- tance. O'Brien, in the view of such college mentors as Billy Hayes of Indiana, Bernie Moore of Louisiana State, Harry Snyder of Ohio State, Brutus Hamilton of California and Dean Cromwell of Southern California, looks to be in the class of the 400 meters field. He set world records this winter for 600 yards and 600 meters in Madison | Bquare Garden. Jimmy Luvalle of U. C. L. A., an John McCarthy, of Southern Call- fornia, are rated O'Brien's leading | rivals on the west coast. Ray Ellin- ‘wood of the University of Chicago has developed sensationally indoors. Glen Hardin, Louisiana State, will confine his efforts to the 400 meter hurdles this year. With The Majors (By the Associated Press) Cards Thump Dodgers Bradenton—The Dodgers went down 9-3 before the Cards Monday and there was a stern look on Casey Stengel's face after the game was over that forebode plenty of work Tues- day. Yanks to Play St. Petersburg—After two cancella- tions the Yankees and the Cards meet in the Grapefruit league Tuesday. Johnny Broaca, Monte Pearson and |Walter Brown will do the flinging for jhe men of McCarthy. Joe Demaggio will be in center field. Blanton to Start San Antonio—Cy Blanton expects tart on the mound for the Pirates y as they test their right janded batting lineup against the tubs. The game will be the first of a jong exhibition tour that will carry e Cubs to Florida by March 27. Rookies to Go Orlando—The likelihood that own- pr Clark Griffith of the Senators vould let his squad of rookie pitchers go grew Tuesday when Bucky Harris | | ught the 1936 signals to all of the quad except the rookie twirlers, Buck | } n worried the camp when he of a pain in his knee, hich was broken last year. Rookies Slated on Mound ‘Tampa—Southpaw Junie Barnes pe tighthander Red Davis, both! o were scheduled to pitch for he Reds Tuesday against the Boston Dressen said he hoped they would “show me something—they de- @ trial.” p-4 victory over the Tigers, Manager McKechnie planned to use the bame lineup against the Reds today. Werber May Be Traded Sarasota—Eddie Collins of the Red Box says Billy Werber’s expressed de- ire to be traded is up to Manager Joe ronin. Cronin indicated he was pleased with the way Johnnie Kron- was behaving himself on Werber's hird-base position. ‘Tigers to Play Brewers Lake Walesi—|Manager Mickey ochrane brought his Tiger squad Tuesday to meet the Milwaukee vers in a game dedicating a new . Alvin Crowder was reported to having trouble with his pitching | mm, kinked in early practice, and vas under the care of a specialist. Higgins, Mack in Huddle Fort Myers, Fla.—Pinky Higgins, oldout third baseman, arrives Tues- for a conference with Connie . He is expected to come to ms, giving the A’s a squad of 46 nen. The Browns are due here Wed- jesday for a training game. LANGDON COPS CROWN Langdon, N. D., March 17.—()-- fi defeated Hannah 55-43 Mon- night to win the sistrict Class B pendent basketball tournament. d rozd conditions cut the entry list P the two teams. St. Patrick’s Dance 4%. Dome Hanna, coach; Rishworth and Ray Yeasley. Pace in Fourth Tourna- ment Victory Klein's Toggery won the champion- ship of the City Basketball league here Monday night by defeating the Montgomery Ward quint, 34-20, in the final game of the double elimination tournament. The Toggery cagers marched to the title with four straight victories, win- ning from the Knights of Columbus, 31-30; Montgomery Wards, 38-33; the Capitol Theatre, 45-13, and Wards again in the championship game. Johnny Yeasley and Ed Fite, for- ward and center, respectively, contin- jued the high sccring pace they have ‘set all season in the final game. Paced by the sharpshooting pair, Klein's jumped to a 16-10 lead in the first half and maintained a safe margin to the end. field goals and seven free throws for top scoring honors while Fite was bagging five from the floor and one from the foul line for all counters. Leier, forward, was the biggest threat in the Ward's offense. He dropped in four buckets and a gift shot to keep the store team in the running during the first half. Cliff Morlan added five more points from the other forward berth. to a close. Klein’s had previously in the double round robin that pre- mount Theatre team winding up i second place. The summary: Klein's fg ft pe Wards y boa tole jan Cummins 3 Kunz 1 Gorman 138 9 ry 4 32 1 1 8 Totals Totals Yeasley garnered 17 points on five | The game brought the City League | wound up at the top of the standings | ceded the tournament with the Para- ue 3] Bates, g | Foster |'Thronson 0 Flying Dutchmen Win From Menoken, 33-30 Menoken, N. D., March 17.— Bis- |marck’'s Flying Dutchmen, a team of higy school seniors, defeated the Me- noken Independents, 33-30, hanging up their 15th victory out of 17 starts this season at Menoken Friday night. Erickson, center for the Bismarck team, counted nine times from the floor, and once from the free throw line to pace the victors but was nosed out by Hollister for Menoken who garnered 20 points on 10 field goals. In the preliminary game, the Me- noken prep cagers defeated Moffit, 19-9. The summary: Dutchmen fe ft pf Menoken fy tt pf Schul » f 2 Dohn, g 0 Totals 16 1 4 Referee, Abelein. Beulah Independents 0 Totals Defeat Stanton, 16-15! Beulah, N. D., March 17.—Paced by Steigmeier, who counted nine points on four field goals and a gift shot, the Beulah Independents defeated Stanton Independents, 16-15, closely-contested game Htére Wednes- day night. were the best performers from Sian- ton, In a preliminary game, the Stanton Cubs scored a 14-10 victory over the Beulah reserves. The Peters'n, ¢ 2 David, g 0 0 ‘Ox 0 0 Leupp — Totals Totals 6 Referee, Webber, the | in a W. Leinuis and Grannis} Rivals in First Round of State Tournament __ Photo by Campbell Glenn Hanna's Demons will meet Marty Engh’s Wops Thursday night in what promises to be one of the highlights of the first round of the state basketball classic. Reading from left to right are: Top row— Evan Lips, Charles Connor, Johnny Abbott, Bob Tavis, Bob Peterson, Botton row—Elfred Elofson, McGuiness, Jack Bowers, Jim Burckhardt and Bob Penner, student manager. Buddy Beall, Harry Helmuth Clausnitzer, Clayton Welch, Capt. Jim -|tive in the Class B_ tournament at Wahpeton’s high-scoring quint lost orlly one game this season and that to the local Maroon and White team. Pictured above, reading from left to right, are: lan, LeRoy Hausauer, Kenneth Butcher, Willard Eckes, student manager; bottom row—Joe xafournaise, Charles Deissler, Capt. Harvey Rife, Norman Smith, Lawrence Cain and James Schwarzyock. KLEIN’S WIN CITY CAGE TITLE, DEFEATING WARD QUINT, 34-20 |Peesley and Fite Set Scoring Top row—Engh, coach; Francis LaSota, Robert Cal- Local Boxers Will Appear at Billings Demaray, Hetherington, Has- selstrom Wind Up Train- ing for Bouts Isham. Hall and three top-notch fighters in his local fight stable were ir: Billings, Mont., Tuesday winding {up training for a 36-round fight card Thursday night. Dick Demaray, leading claimant to Northwest welterweight crown, will tangle with Puggy Weinert of Chicago in the 10-round main event. Ernie Hetherington, former Winni- peg middleweight, will trade punches with Jimmy Best of Billings in a 10- round semi-windup. In one of the six-round prelimin- aries, “Wild Bill” Hasselstrom, Bis- {marck heavyweight, will fight Rube Stewart of Butte, Mont. The three fighters, accompanied by their manager, left here last Wed- nesday, immediately on their return from Fargo, where Hetherington and Hasselstrom won bouts on the Elks j card. Independent Tourney Opens at Devils Lake Devils Lake, N. D., March 17.—(?)— | Eight basketball teams, headed by the Bismarck Phantoms, defending cham- |pions, will enter opening round play jin the 1936 North Dakota Class A in- |dependent tournament Tuesday. The Phantoms are paired with the Grafton Soldiers and the Jamestown Caseys with Gii’s Shamrocks of Devils Lake in morning tilts. In the lower bracket, Lankin is paired against the Minot Stags in the first afternoon game, and the Dakota Millers meet 2|\the Mandan Prowlers. Semi-final contests will be played ‘Wednesday morning and the consola- tion and championship finals Wednes- day night. OUR BOARDING HOUSE Y/ GET A LOAD OF THAT, Mike ! THERE'S BOARD AND LY HOOPLE MANOR, EH? By Ahern ey ROOM. __—.. {can’t help but wish some of them Happy over the Bees’ | A HASHERY WE MIGHT HIDE OUT IN, AND GET A ON THE CUFF poly HOOPLE MANOR’ Yourists SSS GPHE MAZOR PUT THE SIGN UP ~~ Sn!7_e1936 ov nea WEEKS LODGING ch. MASOR HOOPLE, PROPRIETOR! HE LOOKS LIKE AN EGG THAT'D BE EASY TO BEAT! WE'LL GET A LINE ON HIM, AND (F HES A SUCKER FOR A BRICK IN A BROWN DERBY, WHEN WE GET THROUGH WITH HIM, HE'LL GO BACK TO A TEETHING RING! Defeats Battaglia Son of Phantom Mike Wins Every Round From Win- nipeg Sete! Minneapolis, March 17.—()—Young Jack Gibbons, St. Paul boxer, Tues- day was ready for new opponents. having proved convincingly he was master of Frankie Battaglia of Win- nipeg. Keeping his left hand in Battaglia'’s face with stinging jabs throughout, the son of Phagtom Mike Gibbons of the prize ring, soundly whipped the Winnipeg boxer in a 10-round bout at the auditorium Monday night. The victory was his second over Frankie. In the fifth and ninth rounds Gib- bons snapped punishing uppercuts to the Winnipeg boxer’s head that hac the latter worried, but Jack was un- able to put his foe away. The St. Paul boxer won every round on Referee Ed. Shave's score sheet. He weighed 168 and Battaglia 163. Steele, Washburn Meet in Regional Playoff Game Slated for 8 P. M., Wednesday at Me- morial. Building As a sort of a prelude to the state Class A tournament which opens here Thursday afternoon, Steele and Wash- burn will clash here Wednesday night to determine the regional representa- Valley City, March 27 and 28. Decision to play the game on the World War Memorial building floor, starting at 8 p. m., Wednesday was reached here Monday, according to Supt. H. O. Saxvik, superintendent of the public schools. Coach A. O. Stenehjem’s Steele high school quint won the district five championship Saturday night by downing Hazelton in the final tour- nament game, 24-21, ‘Washburn annexed the district six title in a hard-fought game with Mc- Clusky in the finals, which the Mc- Lean county representatives won, 17- 16. Washburn had previously beaten Max, 28-25, in the semi-finals of the tournament conducted a week ago. Officials for the regional playoff game will be Glenn Hanna and George Schaumberg, both of the local high school. Scores of fans from the two cities are expected to be on hand for the game. Sports Round-Up) By EDDIE BRIETZ | Longwood, Fla, March 17.—(P}— ‘Way down here in America’s winter trotting horse capital, more than 100 blue bloods of the harness racing world are readying up for their sea- son's campaign on the Grand circuit. . It would take more than $1,000,000 to buy the lot of trotters and pacers at wholesale. . . . Among them 3s Rosalind, red hot favorite to win the Hambletonian stakes, the Kentucky derby of the trotters. Rosalind ts owned by Gibson 20-year-old son of Ben famous Lexington, Ky., +.» Ben trains Rosalind but sometimes has to take orders from his son. The White stable of 42 horses is the largest here... . It includes the strings of W. N. Reynolds, Winston Salem, N. C., tobacco millionaire, and his nephew, R. J. Reynolds, Jr... . Be- tween them they own 30 of White's charges. . . . All the Reynolds horses wear blankets advertising the fact that they'd walk a mile for that cig- arette. . . . On occasions, Mr. White would try trotting for a change... . Seminole park where the harness stars tune up is 16 miles from Or- lando. . . . Originally it was built for a running horse track, but was abandoned. ... W. N. Reynolds bought it and turned it over to his fellow horsemen. . . . It is an ideal spot for the purpose. . ... Although pushing 70, Reynolds works his own horses daily. ...» Monday he drove Bill Stang, one of his four Hambletonian candidates, in four mile-heats and warmed up other colts between heats. naming brands ef tobacco his firm manu- factures. Seth Palin, who drove Greyhound to} victory in the Hambeltonian last year, is here with a string of 23.... His horses occupy one entire barn, with Greyhound in the No. 1 stall... . This year Palin, one of the best in the business, will try to cop the Hambletonian with either the Master Palin is among the ink Rosalind has the Odds and Enas: Grevhaund takes @ nap every afternoon... .Ben White sings to his horses as he drives them around the track.... Mrs. James Mul- vey, who some day will own the Brook- lyn Dodgers, is a trotting horse en- thusiast and is at the track daily. . Bhe helps train the White string, Just for the fun of it... . Another woman driver is Mrs, Martin Snyder, of Plain- field, J., who helps work her father’s horses... . Most of the stables ‘will leave for the north about April 25. MUSIC BY GUY FUDGEY AND HIS 8-PIECE BAND ,| National League pennant. |Favored Quints Win AAU Tourney Games} Dummy Frankie Frisch Is Own Biggest Worry With Gelbert An- other Question Mark Bradenton, Fla., March 17.—(?)— That “gas house gang” from 8t. Louis, strengthened by a “tough guy” from Coogan’s Bluff, will be the team they all will have to beat for the 1936 The “tough guy,” Leroy Parmelee, has made such an impression in the Cardinal camp that the gang can’t see how it can be stopped in the pen- nant drive. In him they see the one ee at pitching cog that was missing last year when the 21-in-a-row Chicago Cubs beat them out in the final ser- ies of the campaign. Coupled with the two Deans, who are certain to come to terms before the club starts on its northward journey, Parmelee, obtained from the New York Giants, is expected to give St. Louis all the pitching strength bad | needs. Parmelee Excites Even Frisch Even such a hardened campaigner | as Manager Frankie Frisch is excited about Parmelee. “Parmelee appears to have just what we want,” says Frisch, “and that’s everything. With the two Deans, Parmelee and Bill Hallahan, who looks better than he has in sev- eral seasons, we should have a pitch- ing staff second to none in the league. “I don’t say we are a cinch to win the flag, but you can paste it in your hat that we are going to be the team to beat.” Frisch expects to carry 10 pitchers this year until he can round out a winning staff. Besides his probable “big four’—the Deans, Parmelee and Hallahan—he is counting on Bill Walker, Jess Haines, Bill McGee, Ed Heusser, Dominic Ryba and Nelson Potter, a promising right hander. Pilot Is Own Big Worry Frisch’s big worry, however, is Mr. Frisch. It’s almost a cinch Frankie can’t go through at top speed for an entire season at second. Pat Ankenman, 133-pound fielding wizard from Columbus, may do it but it is doubtful if he can fill Frisch’s 10-acre shoes. Third base is the other big problem. Right now, Charlie Gelbert looks like his old self on that hot spot, but he himself doesn’t think he can play more than 130 games. Ripper Collins and Leo Durocher fill the bill nicely enough at first and shortstop. Loss of Bill Delancey weakened the catching staff, but Frisch isn’t fret- ting about that department with Virgil Davis and Brusie Ogrodowsk!, another Columbus farm hand, at the post. The outfield, consisting of Terry Moore, Ducky Medwick, and Pepper Martin, causes no worry. Denver, March 17.—(?)—Favored quintets entered the lists in the Na- tional A, A. U. basketball tournament Tuesday and the competition of the second round tonight will have brought every entry into action. The Santa Fe Trails of Kansas City, defending champions, drew as their second round opponents the Phillips University team of Enid, Okla., while the Kansas City Philcos, prime favorites to relieve the Santa Fes of the crown, were matched with the Arkansas Teachers of Conway. Twenty-eight teams still were in the running after completion of four second round games last night. Denver University downed Brook- lyn College, 45-40; United Service of St. Louis took a 38-35 thriller from the Udicks of Colorado Springs; the Globe Refiners of McPherson, Kas., smothered the Denver Royal Hearts, St. Louis, 64-37, and the Denver Safety five landed ahead of the Marine Corps base of San Diego, Calif., 54-32. SPENCER VICTOR Rochester, Minn., March 17.—(?)— Eddie Spencer, 152, Rochester, de- cisioned Johnny Stanton, 149, St. Paul, in the six round main event of a box- | ing card Monday night. } KASHEY PINS COOK La Crosse, Wis. March 17.—(®)— Abe Kashey, 212, Paterson, N. J., de- feated Ed Cook, 210, Cedar Rapids, Ta., in one fall in a headline wrestling bout here Monday night. Fights Last Night | OO (By the Associated Press) Philadelphia — Leroy Haynes, 197%, Los Angeles, stopped Primo Carnera, 265, Italy, (3). New York — Alberto (Baby) Arizmendi, 131;, New York state featherweight champion, and Phil Baker, 13114, Norwalk, Conn., drew, (10). Rochester — Eddie Spencer, 152, Rochester, outpointed Johnny Stanton, 149, St. Paul, (6). 3 Minneapolis—Young Jack Gib- bons, 166, St. Paul, outpointed Frankie Battaglia, 163, Winnipeg, (10). Sy Rowling Scores Capital Cafe trundlers maintained their one game lead in the City League Monday night by taking three games ina row from the last place Co- man’s Tourist Court, but Woolworth’s continued hot on their heels by win- ning three straight from the seventh- place Town Talk Cafe. The Wool- worth team pulled temporarily ahead ot the O. H. Will Company in their battle for second place, forcing Wills to win all three games tonight to re- main deadlocked in the runnerup po- sition. worth’s toppled the maples for con- sistent games of 203-214-211—628 for the evening's high three game total. The scores: Zeyw A Woolworth 206-185-168— 560 203-214-211— 628 146-170-148— 464 140-140-140— 420 191-179-197- 7 37- 37- 37. Primo’s Comeback Dream Shattered Haynes, Brawny West Coast Negro, Stops Former Cham- pion in Third Round Philadelphia, March 17.—()—The comeback bubble Primo Carnera was inflating toward title-challenging size is shattered. Larruping Leroy Haynes, @ brawny battler from the Pacific Coast, smashed the former heavy- weight champion’s hopes in three battering rounds Monday night before 10,000 fans at the arena. Referee Matt Adgie raised the Los Angeles Negro’s hand in token of one . of the year's surprising victories at 53 seconds of the third, when Carnera turned his back and quit. He had been floored twice in the second. Haynes stopped the Italian in half the time it took Joe Louis. Haynes and his manager, Pete Moran, Tuesday were gunning for Louis. Although they have made offers to the Brown Bomber from Detroit in the past, they did not have the foun- dation the victory over Primo gives them. Nordell Conquers Two Crack Milers Former N. Y. University Runner Outsmarts Cunningham and Mangan Elmer Olson for the ‘Wool- } Newark, N. J., March 17.—()—This ‘business of outsmarting the opposi- tion is getting to be a habit with track stars. Glenn Cunningham, the world’s fastest miler, did it in Madison Square Garden Saturday night to beat Gene Venzke and Joe Mangan in the cele- brated 4:46.8 mile, And Frank Nordell, former New York university runner, turned the —— |trick on Cunningham and Mangan in Cafe 171-212-124— 507 173-171-126— 470 197-200-175—- 581 140-140-140— 420 155-191-187— 533 896-923-752—2511 Capitol Cafe 182-193-223— 598 179-191-188— 558 181-216-180— 577 190. 140-140-140— 420 156-112-133— 401 16- 16- 76— 228 839-844-828—2511 Detroit Lakes Bowler Wins Northwest Title Minneapolis, March 17.—(7)—J. J. Brink of Detroit Lakes Tuesday is king of the Northwest bowlers. The 917 score he rolled Sunday in the} day Northwest individual classic bowling tournament in Minneapolts stood un- shaken at the top of the heap last night as the pin meet came to a close. A. F, Mills of Duluth, who amassed a four-game total of 909 Saturday, retained second place. Brink received the $200 cash prize for first place and the diamond medal emblematic of the championship. The leaders included: J. J. Brink, Detroit Lakes, 917; A. F. Mills, Du- luth, 909; Jimmy Downs, Austin, 876; M. Muus, Grand Forks, 859; Fred Sa- laski, St. Cloud, 848; Joe Wallem, Fargo, 840; A. Enochson, Austin, 839; Al Byrns, ‘Minot, N. D., 751; L. Kels- ven, Minot, 759; A. W. Jackson, Mi- not, 765; Earl Jack, Minot, 740. FOUR QUINTS TRIUMPH Larimore, N. D., March 17.—(P)-- Aneta, Larimore and Logan Center were winners in Class B independent basketball league games here Monday night. Aneta defeated Petersburg, 16-12; Larimore downed Finley 29-28 in an overtime contest, and Logan Center trimmed Sharon, 22-16. the Newark, A. C. carnival Monday night to win an invitation 1,500-meter Trace, Cunningham jumped out in front at the gun Monday night and was ahead at the first quarter. Nordell Was second and Mangan third. Going into the fourth lap, Nordell lengthened his stride and moved past Cunningham, quickly opening a 15- yard lead. Still the Kansan and Mangan kept their pace and at the seventh lap of the nine-lap race Nordell was 30 yards ahead. Not until then did the famous pair 509 | seem to worry. They unloosed their 2839 |f@mous sprints on the final lap, and came up amazingly fast but Nordeli had judged right and they wrong. The New Yorker crossed the line two yards ahead of Cunningham and three ahead of Mangan, in 4 minutes 6.8 seconds. Sarazen Team Wins Amateur-Pro Event St. Augustine, Fla., March 17.—(?) Overtime work in the second an- nual amateur - professional best ball golf tournament finals added $700 to Gene Sarazen’s bank account Tues- Paired with Mally Reynolds of Jacksonville, the stocky Brookfield Center, Conn., professional Monday defeated Henry Picard of Hershey, Pa., and Jack Cummings of New York in three extra holes. Picard collected $400 while the pro- fessional members of the losing semi- finalist team—Paul Runyan of White Plains, N. Y., and Orville White of 8t. Louis—drew $250 each. SAINTS BEAT MILLERS St. Paul, March 17.—(4)—St. Paul's league leading hockey team Monday night handed Minneapolis a 2 to 1 de- feat in an American Hockey associa- tion game to dim the Mill City club’: chances of winning a playoff berth The Saints will close their season against Minneapolis here Wednesday {night. NEGRO WHIPS LITTMAN Milwaukee, March 17.—(?)—Buck Creed, Milwaukee Negro, defeated Tait Littman, Cudahy, Wis. in an eight round headline boxing bout Monday night. “T stili remember that first Pipefu’ says LOU WILKENS LOOK AT LOU WIL- KENS, about todo some gardening around the place.He’s fondofsmok- ing Prince Albert in his pipes! “The first time I tried P.A.,” Mr. Wil- kens said when this photo was made, “I knewby the taste it was milder and mellower!” © 18 8. 2. Preis Dh Om Be guided by Lou Wilkens’ tip on pipe smoking — you risk nothing? ‘Smoke 20 fragrant pipefuls of Prince Albert. If you don’t find it the mellowest, tastiest pipe tobacco you ever smoked, return the pocket tin with the rest of the tobacco in it tous at any time within a month from this date, and we will refund full purchase price, plus postage. Winston-Salem, (Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, N.C. NGE ALBERT THE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE of Prince Albert,” this picture of Mr. Wilkens seems to say. F. A. is cool, slow-burning—does not bite the tongue. It’s the grandest of “‘makin’s” for roll- ing cigarettes too. The offer at left. = Everybody Welcome