Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
v f \ \ / ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUFSDAY, APRIL 28, 1936 | Cleveland Indians Looming Bigger As Pennant Contenders - BIABHOWERHOWWS [Turf Writer Sees Brevity Tow-Roping Great Field in Kentucky Derby BROWNS 70 SEVEN | LOUISVILLE SEETHES AS 62ND [Limited Athletic | t Max Is Confident Th : IC BOLD VENTURE, NED || Sports Round-Up | Da is Content] e HITS, WINS 2 10 1; ANNUAL TURF CLASSIC NEARS} Field for Girls | By EDDIE BRIETZ . a, | REIGH, COLDSTREAM ; ' H I] R d d ' New York; April 28.—(}—They Bruce Campbell’s Circuit Clout| | Sets Javelin Mark »|Railbirds Pick J. E. Widner's S$ Necommende cr saula pall the wool over the eves of 4 in Seventh Provides Win- Brevity as Horse to Beat | STRONG CONTENDE Blase Tight out and tagged the propos- OU ATIONAL EAGT. ning Margin Saturday State Board of Control Urges i Butuneiae cue Woh. Bek Discontinuance of Cage ‘ fight to the coast Giacinnatt 7 3 3a REDS NOSE OUT CUBS, 5-4) Louisville, Ky., April 28.—()—Like Competition Grand Slam and The Fighter as a “cheap publi- Chicago . +. ee a mighty volcano, seething to un- Other Threats in 62nd city stunt.” . . Brooklyn 6 6 "500 SARUARAER 4 Gi na loosen its roaring charge, this Blue —_ i Said it did the Philadelphia 6 1 462 Double by Ernie Lombardi in Grass metropolis Tuesday awalted the! Oakes, N. D., April 28—()—A lim- Annual Running town more harm i tos... cg oe! ae Last of Tenth Ends Tight 62nd running of the Kentucky Derby. |ited field of interscholastic competi- than good Pittsburgh ert 5 44g ast of Ten Hy 4 Outwardly there was little to indi-jtion has been recommended for high ——_-———- Tom Sweeney says Boston’. On aa gan Pitching Duel cate that four days hence the pick of }School girls in North Dakota by the By MAX RIDDLE in the Worcester] | 2 J [——_(\ i : the three-year olds would answer the|North Dakota high school league. NEA Turf Writer (Mass.) Gazette Results Monday ———_—_——_ bugle call at Churchill Downs for the} A resolution, presented following a} Louisville, April 28.—(#)—Brevity| that those New Cincinnati 5; Chicago 4. (By the Associated Press) country’s greatest turf classic, There|survey by a committee composed of appears a certainty to tow-rope the York scribes who Only game pinyed okie American League managers are were no signs that upwards of 50,000 | Superintendents E .A. Quam of Oakes | field in the Kentucky Derby Satur- want to bet Joe Di played. scanning the record of the Cleveland fans from every section of the coun-|and Harold Wakefield of LaMoure, |day. Maggio will not AMERICAN LEAGUE Indians these days and finding there- try would pack the quarter-mile long}and unanimously adopted at the re-| I look for the Joseph E. Widener | play 50 games for WoL in little solace for the road that lies grandstand from rafter to rafter. cent meeting in Grand Forks: star's main opposition to come from the Yanks this Cleveland aie ay ahead. ‘ Underneath, however, there was a| Approved girls’ interscholastie com-|Bold Venture, Ned Reigh—if he 48/ vear can find plenty of takers in Wor- gies a key The Indians are leading the pack restlessness, which, if it runs true to!petition in golf, tennis, archery, soft- |right—Grand Slam, and possibly from | cester, Ray Blades began a Detroit ae ee ‘00 with eight wins in 11 starts this seae form, will burst loose with a roar Fri-|ball and volleyball. the Milky Way Farm entry of The shake-up of the Rochester Red Wings New York a ae son. However, it isn't the number of day, when the multitude, including} Recommended all member schools |Fighter and Sangreal. by ordering several players to change Ww. a om. oe lee victories but the way they scored thousands of Kentucky colonels and discontinue interscholastic sports for| Coldstream is another which mey| -oommates. babe e A oane them that impresses the old hands of admirals, descend on the city. Some|girls in basketball, basketball tourn-|make a fight of it. There’s no doubt In the mind of Philece! tide a eae baseball campaigning. 17,000 colonels and admirals were re-Jaments, and “similar sports where| Some say that if some horse races; (©. 11) Winn poss of the | Max Schmeling about the outcome | Philadelphia SS ake Wb Steve O'Neill, of the square jaw and stored to good standing Monday by {opposing players come in personal | Brevity eye to eye, the current pride ikinitooky G62 visited ‘New York of his forthcoming fight with Joe . rl . i steady eye, has moulded a cohesive Acting Governor James E. Wise. contact.” of Elmendorf will be beaten, especi- entuc! : ae rm in Jack Louls. Very confidently he predict- neue Mee band of ball players who will fight Horsemen, from the trainers down Follow Other States ally if some distance horse is behind.| recently an ee ie ed victory for himself on his ar- : londay you down the line until sie last ball to the swipes, went about the task of] Quam and Wakefield reported that |BUt name the sprinter that will do Tein § dee e Li taauselaten Pree leu Germany Ghar oh ee ered ti (ne et Ra eared preparing the three-year olds for the all states limit interscholastic athletics |‘is trick, or the stayer which will) fel NVst See Way pirate idol) i eee ‘uck. ie jan ave n jump- ce t iigittie Horeehilde with vigor and thelr Pig Tost without exception they {Hmong girls to & considerable degree,/""previty has speed, even enough to| invited Bill to see the derby . . . ‘ aah AMERICAN ASSOCIATION pitching gets better as the season picked J. BE. Widener's Brevity as the jlowed in only one-third of the states mBtcin Etat OL Tacibeeel He fea OMT | a ea saan: @avGEaE herein Capitol Club First Ki Cit aA oe moves along. horse to beat over the one and one-/and tournaments in only six. weight and apparently will do the! railroad tickets, an order for ho- ansas City ......... 2 Be w distance without shortening up. tel accommodations and club- Minneapolis eae | 700 quarter miles. Asked to pick a horse ‘The high school league’s move in 7 kel the trick, they ‘Tintagel is almost certainly | house passes . . . He'll be right St. Paul .. 9 4 692 MONDAY’S STARS most likely to turn e tricl Y |the direction already taken by other ‘ or ou raws i Imost as fi t as the poles. ” sprinter which will stop short of the} there when the bugle blows Sat- Milwaukee 6 6 500 Ernie Lombardi and Tommy Alton Terry of Hardin-Simmons |*ere Simost as far apart as the poles. | states,” Quam declared here follow- diststee. urday. Louisville ..... 6 8 429 Thevenow, Reds—The former hit a || coliege, Abilene, Tex. is shown as |_ One mentioned William Wood-|ing the meeting, “will make the phy-i'S:osoq looks to me to be little] of \ shoe. 3: Cima +, |Columbus 4 8 333 homer to tie the score against the || he tossed the javelin 222.65 feet to. | Ward's Granville. sical education motive attainable |, 110, ire igi Hs WebR RE 13 Veterans of Last Year's! Oya,” og ae Cubs and then doubled in tenth || win the event at the annual Drake |. “But what's the matter with Grand/with the least danger of other mo- = early class has been la¢l Ray Carlin, manager of Frankie Cc ign R t to M as : oh scoring winning run when Theve- || telays at Des Moines, la. His toss |Siam?” countered another. tives and effects overshadowing the/!™S. ot a a, i Klick, is around again after several jampaign Heport toman= oesessh) now singled. shattered the National collegiate | “Z'll take Banister.” replied a little/real purpose of the activity.” aie a T a ; seiner 8? ®/ tough months in a hospital . . . ager Kollman ts Monday Bruce Campbell, Indians — His || mark of 221 feet 11 inches. (Asso. |COlored boy (he must have been from} Quam explained that “athletics for recblen . aEkantn lies races |Now they're calling the Red Sox the Sti Paul “pes cant aiete homer in seventh broke pitcher's |} ciated Press Photo) E. R. Bradley's stable). girls and boys always has been aimed haven't been smashing enough to] vawkeybilts . Detroit fans are —— sae cane duel and gave Cleveland 2-1 win ‘And then in rapid succession came|toward promotion of ‘physical, men-|W"Tant the assumption they can beat | riging Mickey Cochrane . . .Alarge| A squad of 35 candidates, including ly game played. . over St. Louis Browns, e the names of such good horses as The|tal, and social growth by the use and| Brevity, even as a team, part of the turf mob is converging on | veterans from last season’s campaign Mai ¢ Grimes Ordered Fighter, Teufel, Coldstream and In-|development of the body through ath- Teamwork Not Enough | | Pawtucket for the Narragansett op-|and several good prospects up from | ajor League Pitchers Show Stuff dian Broom, letic activities’ yet many prominent! The Fighter has speed. So has San-/ening Saturday . . . More than 400/the ranks of the American Legion Leaders Mel Harder, Oral Hildebrand, Lloyd je ” . figures in the field of women’s sports |steal. But if they get out with Tin-|jife-time passes to all major league |team, has reported to Manager Henry Brown, Johnny Allen and George le gain are agreed that interclass competition tagel and Brevity, will they have any-| ball parks have been sent to old ball|Kollman of the Capitol nine. m ® Blacholder all have been showing for girls is the most ideal situaton.” thing left for the finish Brevity, Bold | players . All flatbush is raving] Included in the large squad which CD emacre plenty of stuff and if Willis Hudlin —_—_——_- 135 Favor Limitation enture and Ned Reigh can make?| about Ben Geraghty, former Villan-|held its first session Sunday were 5 kes on a new lease of life the In-| . If they lay off the pace Brevity may|ova star, at shortstop. nine pitchers, three catchers, 15 in-|Batting—Gehringer, Tigers, 457; bere Fiery Colonel Manager Chased A survey of every classified high |e too far in front to catch. The : fielders and eight outfielders. Dickey, Yankees, .417, dians will have a pitching staff that ig! school in the state brought 173 replies |teamwork of the Milky W: i ° fe ‘Tigers. 15: e * . A f y Way pair won Veterans from last year include: ;Runs—Gehringer, Tigers, 15; Gehrig, may make the fans forget about thi Third Time as Saints to 207 request cards, Quam reported.|the Texas Derby, but not by enough How those Oklahomans can {pitchers Johnny. Kolpacoff, Paul| Yankees, 13 GReacsa’ ieny the tee i From these replies it was learned +> hope for a repeat in the Kentucky| St@pple; out of 23 available Amer- |xronahan, Ronald Erickson and Mike|Hits—Travis, Senators; Gehringer, the rest. Harold Wee Re ties Triumph, 3-1 that 135 answered yes to the question | srrair, i ican titles this year, Oklahoma jsunat; Infielders Glen Vantine and| Tigers, and Bell, Browns, 21. : RICE M PLAN Sac cepa ot saber LITTLE FINGER AIDS IN CLUB|“do you believe that interscholastic|~ Tintagel's dam was Heloise, dam of boys won 18 . . . They grabbed |x4 Kounovsky, first sackers; John|Home runs—Trosky, Indians 8; Foxx, Us daca fre tl GRIMES FINED $25 | CONTROL IN BACKSWING — [competition among girls should Pe|the sprinter Sergeant B: five of seven in the intercolle- {yonaghan, third baseman; and Out-| Red Sox, 4. : % ing care of the heavy batting chores. i ” spri lergeant Byrne. lonaghan, ASE) >; an , 4. ed Columbus, O., April 28.—(P)— Nmited?” Twenty-six favored allowing! tolivrood has more speed blood! in| siates . . . Seven of nine inthe |Nedets Ed ‘Ryckman, Ray Lenihan Pitching—Grove, Red Sox, 3-0. mecehy ie leading tie jeemue 1) Gearge M. Traut ident of: |no competition and 12 believed itlnim than st national A. A. U, meet and six ef [pick LaRue and Bob Allison. Koll- z ‘ home runs with five and his 16 runs- rge M. Trautman, president of should be on ® par with: boys. jan staying. tee trials. cl jue ant in. - Kol ——- batted-in is only one behind Bill| the American Association, fined ‘While $8 sicher hevesb aii|,, Bull Dog got in St. Bernard a colt| seven ymplc +++ Iman, besides managing the team, will NATIONAL LEAGUE Dickey of the Yanks. Brown, Harder, Allen and Blae- holder all have gone the distance and won, Harder and Allen each have notched two victories single-handed. Homer Sews Up Win Blaeholder came into his own in his first start of the season Monday when he held the St. Louis Browns to seven hits and won his own game 2-1. It was Campbell’s homer in the seventh that provided the winning run, It was the only game played in the League, the only other major league contest being played in the National circuit where the Cin- cinnati Reds nosed out the Cubs 5-4 in 10 innings. Lombardi’s double with two in the last of the tenth started Reds on the road to victory. ‘Tommy Thevenow met one of Lon | f # Burleigh Grimes, manager of the Louisville Colonels, $25 and sus- pended him for 48 hours Tuesday because of his run-in with Um- pi-e O’Brien Sunday. Chicago, April 28.—(#)—Manager: Burleigh Grimes of the Louisville! may set a record this season for be- tion games. The fiery Grimes was ordered to the showers Monday as his club took | a 3-1 beating from St. Paul. It was the third time since the season. opened | that Grimes has been ordered off the| field. to win. It was St. Paul's third straight victory over the crippled Colonels, who have four regulars out of their Warneke's slants for a single and the game was over. Warneke went into the game in the sixth after Larry had been taken out for a pinch hitter and until that tenth in- gave the rising Reds only two ay NATIONAL LEAGUE Hollingsworth Checks Cubs Cincinnati — Hollingsworth won a 10-inning hurling duel from French and Warneke as Cincinnati defeated Chicago, 5-4. RHE Chicago ......102 010 0000-411 2 Cincinnati ....001 210 0001-5 9 1 French, Warneke and Hartnett; 4ollingsworth and Lombardi. Pittsburgh-St. Louis rain. Others not scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE Tribe Browns Trims Cleveland — The Cleveland Indians defeated St. Louis 2-1 in the only American League game. -000 100 000— 1 7 1 RHE Cleveland . Van Atte and Hemsley; Blaeholder Reconditioning Work Done on Mott Course Mott, N. D., April 28.—()—Mott's golf course is in the best shape it has ever been at this time of the year ac- cording to V. L. Gilbreath, secretary, who announced considerable improve- ment work has been completed. Since the spring meeting, the course has been reconditioned throughout, greens reoiled and resanded, tee boxes leveled and the dam on the course en- larged to hold back additional water, Gilbreath explained. An inter-club tournament with the Hettinger unit June 21 is under con- sideration and the annual open tour- nament will be held during the month of August, he said. A. P, Auer has been elected presi- dent and L, L. Brundage, Matt Meis- ner, Hugo Auer and Dr. O. Maerchlein members of the advisory board. SS Nationally-Known STETSON HATS for men, sold exclusively Alex ro. He ANNOUNCEMENT! -100 000 10x— 2 8 0 lineup. Minneapolis and Indianapolis and Kansas City and Columbus were rain- ed out. Milwaukee and Toledo were not scheduled. Saints Halt Colonels Louisville — Weinert pitched St. Paul to a 3-1 victory over Louisville. RHE St. Paul.. 000 001 0022— 3 8 0 Louisville 001 000 000— 1 9 3 Weinert and Fenner; Marrow and Thompson, Ringhofer. Kansas City-Columbus rain. Minneapolis-Indianapolis rain. Others not scheduled. PLUMMER VICTOR Lou Plummer, 245, Baltimore, scored | @ fall over Ivan Vakturoff, nona, in eight minutes. Colonels, if he holds his present pace,: ing chased out of American Associa- ! The Saints scored twice in the ninth} on two walks and Stenbacker's double | Rochester, Minn., April 28.—(P)—| 235, Riga, Russia, in 23 minutes of a one-| hour time limit wrestling match Mon-! day night. Frank Topaz, 210, Minne-| apolis pinned Joe Fredericks, 201, Wi- | 1 jand 22 basketball tournaments among the 173 reports, 63 were for basket- ball and 85 against; 30 for basketball |tournaments and 112 against. Three league members voted for jfleld hockey with none opposed; 12 jfor track, four opposed; 16 for volley- ball, seven opposed; and a prepon- derant number favored golf, tennis and archery. Soft ball drew 23 ayes and two nays and table tennis was recommended by three members with only one school reporting it spon- sored that activity. Harridge Sees Hot Chase in American Chicago, April 28—(?)—This year’s American League pennant race, Pres- By ART KRENZ (NEA Service Golf Writer) { As the club is taken back with the left hand in control, the wrists begin to cock as the top of the backswing is reached. Here a firm grip is impor- tant. If the left hand is not firmly holding the shaft, the club will be thrown out of the proper line—which is pointing over the shoulder to the , objective, Too, it may drop over the ‘shoulder, or turn in the player's ‘hands; naturally the clubhead can- not follow the correct path in the ; downswing. Keep a firm grip with the little finger at the top of the backswing. It gives control of the club. | | | CORBETT IS SOLD Eau Claire, Wis., April 28. — (>) — Tom Corbett, former Brainerd out- fielder, whose contract was turned back to the Northern League by St. Paul a few weeks ago, was sold to Elmira of the NYP circuit, Northern | League officials announced Tuesday. THAT 1AM SAW-TOOTHING THIS COURT SUMMONS—~KACK-KACK—~ THRU A DEAL WITH MY OLD COLLEGE CHUM, ALDERMAN FATTLETON, sO OUR BOARDING HOUSE ident William Harridge predicted Tuesday, “will produce more fire- works than any American League bat- tle has in several years, with four and possibly five clubs involved in a hot fight for the championship.” “This looks like our year to supply the action,” Harridge said. “It’s been about 10 years since the league has had a good fight involving as many as four clubs, “During the spring training season it was freely predicted that Detroit, Boston, New York and Cleveland had chances to win. I think those four clubs will remain in positions wheré the loss of a single game as late as July may make big differences in the standings. “And the Washington Senators are not to be sneezed at.” GRADS RETAIN TITLE Edmonton, Alta., April 28. — (?) — The Edmonton Grads retained their North American and International women’s basketball championship by defeating the Tulsa Stenos, 35 to 30, for their third win in a three-out-of- five series, ACRANK UP YOUR CROCK, AN! INVENT AXNECKTIE RAK THATS SNITCH-PROOF, } SO T'LL HAVE A CHANCE TO'DON MY CHECKED J Se TiE YOURE MUCH PRESSURE WAS TURNED ON MY TAILOR'S COUNSELLOR THAT HE PULLED THE TEETH OUT OF (S THIS SUMMONS AND, RATHER THAN RILE THE IRE OF ONE WITH MY ql “a> POLITICAL PRESTIGE, YZ SAM STAMPEDA PAID-UP STENCIL ON MY TAILOR SEG “MY ‘ Us Se eR BR STROH LampoUs et eeercoTee OSEAN that could go a distance, but not against the tops. Coldstream will be in better Derby shape than was St. Bernard a year ago, but both he and The Fighter will have to prove their distance ability before ‘they can be rated as formidable over a route. The same is true of Sangreal, the dam of which, Hayai, was pure speed blood. Coldstream proved that he could slaughter St. Bernard, and his con- nections believe him a winner. Grand Slam Likes Mud Grand Slam, always something! of an enigma, should go well in mud, but his first outing on a fast track was none too impressive. Yet he is a shifty sort that surprises with a tremendous performance just when you least ex- pect it. Indian Broom is as speedy, | or faster, than either Brevity or Tin- tagel. The son of Brooms-Kawita might be the thoroughbred to run those two and Coldstream into the dirt. Yet weight will stop a train, and the Canadian-owned horse will pick up 32 pounds more than he had in the saddle in his world record race at Tanforan. The 2000-mile j ey won’t do him any good, but if he i in top shape, the burden of 126 pounds ‘still figures to cut him down to a conquering size. Stretch one length farther now and assume that M. L. Schwartz’s Bold Venture, apparently one of true high class, has no better luck than he had in 1935, and you have Brevity in a class by himself. Bold Venture suf- fered all manner of ill fortune just when he seemd to be the best juvenile of last year. Brevity will win. Bold Venture will be coming from behind. Coldstream will be making it tough for both of them. Forget Bradley and forget the sprinters. Cup Stars Break Even In Four-Ball Matches Maidstone, Eng., April 28.—(#)—-In their last day of practice before leav- ing for Gleneagles where they will defend the Curtis cup May 6, the American women’s golf team broke even Tuesday in eight four-ball mixed foursome matches over the nine-hole Leeds Castle course. The Americans, playing with Brit- ish amateurs and professionals for partners, won three matches, lost three and halved two. Joyce wethered and John De Forest defeated Patty Berg of Minneapolis, and Denis Kyle, 2 and 1. You're Tellin’ Me| The Yankees have lost all that old team spirit and fight that identified them when the old Bambino was one of their number, according to ‘ob- servers ... and that’s the prime rea- ison why they have been a second- place team in the American League. . + « Floyd Gibbons is the University of Alabama's one-man track team. . . He runs the high and low hurdles, pole vaults, high jumps, and runs on the relay team. .. . In eight years of minor league batting, Oscar Eckhardt, the Brooklyn Dodgers’ outfield at 34, averaged .380 at the plate. |. . Tiny Thornhill faces his biggest test at Stanford this season—15 of the 23 men who won letters in football last year are to be graduated. BUDWEISER Now 15e No Charge for the Bottle Looks like Gene Moore, ton, may have what it takes U. of Washington freshman crews under the direction of Tom Bolles, have won six consecutive Pacific Coast championships and annexed three national titles in the Pough- keepsie regattas . W. FP, Carey, former garden boss, is Mike Jacobs best customer so far . . like that want 600 more the young outfielder Brooklyn passed on to Bos- . He chiled Mike on the phone and reserved 1,200 Louis-Schmeling ringside seats, just s en probably |Wallie Hamilton, shortstop; Arthur “I don't have | Monaghan, third base; and Bob Bo- play shortstop. Promising material from the Junior Legion team, some of whom will join .|that squad later, include Buddy Beall, Elofson and Jim Burckhardt. Other prospects ait: Jimmie Ash- Henry Wadeson and John Cummins, pitchers; J. J. Alberts and Jerry Reh- feld, backstops, Hank Overman, Clare David and E. A. Bates, first sackers; Clifford Morlan, Herm Schultz and Leonard French, second basemen; enough cash on me,” said Carey,|linger and Bird Johnson, outficlders. “ 525 if But can send around $25,000 if you | wednesday and Friday night until the want a binder” Regular practices will be held every right,” Mike drawied, “Just wait till |season opens. you see me.” . wrist in a splint. Nashville Leads Ace Hole Member Roster April .28.—()—The As- sociated Press hole-in-one club roster Tenn. leading all other cities in the nation New York, Tuesday showed Nashville, in the race for one-shot golf honors. Nashville, with four new members having been inducted this week, boosted its total to 12. The total membership of the club now has swelled to 170 with new en- tries pouring in steadily. WADE TRIMS SQUAD Winona, Minn., April 28.—(#)—Dick _of the Duluth Northern League baseball club, today had cut his squad almost to playing size, releasing 11 candidates after Wade, manager Monday’s drill. . Irish and Bob Meu- sel, who once starred in the outfield} 0) for the Giants and Yankees, are play- ing semi-pro ball in California . . . Branch Rickey is back on the job with both eyes discolored and his right Pete Fischer, Peck McGuiness, Fat} rit more, Bernie Ashmore, Eldon Nichols, | Batting—Terry, Giants, 500; Lom- bardi, Reds, .455. Runs—Herman, Cubs, 16; Moore, Giants, 15. its—Herman, Cubs, 22; Moore, Giants, 21. Home runs—Klein, Cuubs, 4; Giants, 4. itching—Eollingsworth, Reds, 3-0. tehing—Pollingsworth, Reds, 3-0. 1 Fights Last Night i | Fights Last Night _ Chicago—Davey Day, 137, Chi- cago, knocked out Mike Primich, 134%, East Chicago, Ind., (4). San Francisco—Ernie Schneider, 115, Portland, Ore., knocked out George Goosby, 160, Bakersfield, Calif., (4). Ott, | ROBERT WRIGHT, hardware mer- chant, takes time to enjoy a pipe and Prince Albert and give his views on smoking tobacco. “Prince Albert is a@ masterpiece,” Mr. Wright says. “P.A. has honest-to-goodness flavor and rich, ripe tastiness.” Enjoy this tobacco nullepaasnts yourself! CEN rN OUT OUR WAY “I'M MIGHTY PARTIAL To P. A.” SAYS ROBERT WRIGHT © 1208, B. J. Rayneide Ted. Co. Here’s our trial offer: Smoke 20 fragrant pipefuls of Prince Albert. If you don’t find it the mellow- est, tastiest pipe tobacco you ever smoked, return the pocket tin with the rest of the tobacce 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. “Makin’s” smokers—Prince Al- bert is swell for cigarettes too! INGE ALBERT - (SOmrns Gok every 2-2. tin of Prince il By Williams eR ell