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" | 10 BAR ITINERANT CADDIES AT HATCH Local Bag Toters Alone May Work at Scioto During Tourney New York, April 22 (®. caddles, Ttinerant golf's soldlers of fortuns and uncrowned heroes wiil be from the east of the open champlon- of many a natlonal tournament, missing ship this year at & “loto, Their exclusion from the major golt competition of the meason, degeribed by officlals because their Visits are considered to have had a | “demoralizing effect” on local club- | carriers, marks an initial step to discourage a travellng corps of be tween 50 and 100 veteran campalgn- ers — experlenced carriers follow thelr {dols from tournament to tour- nament, l'or the first time in the history of a major competition the bag-toting privilege at 0. will be confined to loca dies next July. Long Expericnce The ban will affect many carrlers of long experience upon whom lead ing professionals and amateurs ha relied, not only for efficlent service, but for Information and advice at crucial perlods of play. Outstanding mong those expected to be affected Joe Hor of New York, looked upon as ean of caddies.” 11 hus heen carrying links imp for the game miore Columbus cad ‘or stars Other familiar bag-toters at clam- vionship events heen 1 I s the of N Mar Georgin to pre Brady g with May atter won the ra own in 193 and with Le lis successful drives for the apen titl ind Tranl o Dieg Tamiliar Caddies 1i who wil who 1 Abe Mitchell of of Pasa- for Walter e Florida | ring the latter's r match with Bobby | Marinelll of Cleveland, | nk when the intry Yonald professio! cent victo 1 Mike Jones Bobby Cruick handles a R 7 Rernotts Tobase Winstoe-Salem, N. C. little Beot tled Jones for open hon. ors In 1023 and lost In the playotf and with Jesse Sweetser when the New York amateur rose to the in1 Claims Record Horgan clalms a record for cham plonship cvents surpassing that of any other bag-toter, He caddled for his first champlon in 1806 when Horace Rawlins won the open. He was with Harry Wardon five years later when the Britlsh star took the same event; with Willie Anderson in 1901 and 1005, Fred McLeod in 1005, and Jerry Travers, amateur king in 1918 Horgan dt greatest year three winners t way he puts it Donald in the metropolitan open Dexter Cummings in the intercolle nip, and Miss L4t the ttle 1923 brought seribes his homt s the Bol Mc as ason," oy were glate champlons Cummings ir tournament women's A, MLETING Conventlon At Milwaukee Takes Up Divorce Question waukee, Wis,, fon of the om stion April divorce que protective legislation womer and the broadening of religions re strictions for membership are prob 3 of delegates here for the ninth bicnnlal national convention of th Young Wor hristian ation, Group discussions determing policy of the organization for the were held last night, 000 delegates, include g from apan, the and Luropean countries hand yesterday when M rederic M. Palst, president of the National association, called the con- vention to order, FATAL EXPLOSION for re en's ( wssocl il next two ye More Ching in Milwaukee Sawdust Kills Two City Eiremen Milwan} Wis, April Chief Peter Steinkellner of the fire department ounced an Immediate inquiry the cause of an explosion fn a saw Marsh Wood Pro- in whieh fwo firemen and 19 persons Blast Mil an- into vatkee today duets plant were killed e hurned of 1 other i th to Iircinen jured 1y ve inspecting the their work after a small blaze ap- parently finished. There w blast and instantly millions of wood par- feles, were showered over the men trapped in the blazing bin. were reported bin, oac W WELL, let that go. I'm ready to admit that so far as pipe tobacco is concerned, I've got ideas. And if insisting on a tobacco that won't bite the tongue or parch the throat is “being fussy,” you can write “'guilty” alongside my name, and T won’t even appeal the charge. I can’t speak for anybody else, but personally I smoke for pleasure! So I smoke Prince Albert. I'll say I do. Right after breakfast, on up until I switch off the light for the night. Pipe-load after pipe-load. Day after day. Prince Albert treats my tongue as gently as a mother brand-new baby. —no other tobacco is like peak | n men ware severely burned | {while rescuing the trapped men. NEW —_——— NEWS MOVEMENTS TOD OVER W7 A, P. Oficial Discusses Various Phases of Service Now York, April 22 (Ph="Tle pre ponderant current of world news has moved for centuries, like the course of empire, from east to west, but iu recent years it has tuken a new di raction—from north to south—1o the world's new empire America.” This new phenomenon n th movement of news wus described in « vadio address last night from WJZ by Moredith N, Stiles, in tell ing how news |s sent to South Amer. {ean newspapers by The Aseociatd Stiles {s the head of its an department not untll after the that this flow of news southward b ne fmportant,” he sald, “With their peoples profoundly stirred by its outbreak, Sou'h Amerlcan new papers found thelr faeilities inad quate to meet the demand for infor mation about {t. By makeshifts aud at heavy cost they got the news from one source or another, hut when the war was over, they cast around foi more efficlant means of obtalning world news. “This 18 why The Assoclated Press since 1019 has maintained a large news service to the South Ameriean countries. The Assoclated Press responded to their need and 2 group of South American newspap- ers were admitted to membership in fts cooperative organiation As a consequence these newspapers are now recelving dally through The As soclated Press enough news to fill two newspaper pages, providing them with a comprehensive report of important and inferesting events in all parts of the world, “It is nothing in these days that Buenos Afres, capital of Argentina, where the farthest eouth newspapers are served, s 6,000 miles farther from the sources of world news than Is New York. Ordinary news dis- patches make the journey from the New York office of The Associated Press to newspaper offices in Buenos Aires in from one to two hours over the lines of the All-America cables, | What we call in nowspaper parlanes | ‘bulleting’ telling of highly import- |ant or sensatfonal occurrences, will | be delivered in Buenos Aires in from five to 15 minutes, “When TLuls Angel Firpo and Jack Dempeey had their Httle af- war as whiff of real tobacco. soothing himself with P. | tair at YEAS URo, the Polo Grounds thre an eacited mob that had sathered that night in front of the bulletin bourd o the newsp Nuclon of Buenes Airey within two minutes aft was delivered that their pugilistiy idol had knocked the Yaukef hamplon completely out the ring. The message which spelled to tl Avgentiues the hope that Dempsey was done for and Virpo champlon of the world, was flash Dy Associated ph opert \ New York America Cables over a xpeclal wire ind instuntly speeded on its 6,000 mile cable journey to the bottom of the globe ‘Firpo knocks Dempsey through ropes,' it read electric current carried 1t out mder the gult stream and down ilong the Atlantic coast and across the Caribbean sea to Balboa. Herc it jumped the Isthmus of Panams into the Pacifie, and then, coursing under the Humboldt current, but darting now and then to the South American t as it followed ity ibmarine conductor, it reached v aiso; the principal seaport of Chi Here it leaped by automatic relay to a land line which sipped it aloft 12,000 feet over the top o the Andes, thence down to the Ar | gentine pumpas and across them u thousand miles to Buenos Afre | wh from the cable office there flashed by another epe wire into the office of the lLa Na cion. A man with a megaphone | did the rest “The mighty uproar of shouts and that followed that thrilling ineident in the New York stadium had not reached its cres- cendo bLefore another uproar buret forth from the thousands who on that night packed the streets of Buenos Aires waiting for the Ac ociated Press to tell them how fared the fight for the world's champlonship. Indeed it might be sald that all South Amerlea join- ed In the shouting, for that mes- sage in {ts journey was copled and delivered to newspapers wherever the cahle fouches.the coast as ft loops it way down ta Valparaiso, in Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, | Peru, Bolivia and Chile. From Buenos Ajres it was relayed to | Brazil “It {s thus that the news of the news of the Associated Press is de. livered in South America. Spanisi language papers in Porto Rico are aleo served by this same cable. Cuban papers and Mexican papers {are served by telegraph, while in | the far off Philippines Spanishand language papers are flash- * news through the air from Associated Press office in of an oW cheers | the San They tell me it’s the Prince Albert process that cuts out bite and parch. Fair enough. DIl testify before the well- known world that P. A. is the coolest, sweetest, most genuinely friendly smoke a fellow can get on this planet. You sus- pect that the minute you throw back the hinged lid on the tidy red tin and get a # Now, I'm telling you to be fussy about your smoking. Many a pipe-smoker has fooled himself when he should have been A. Isay it pays to be fussy about anything that means so much to a man, What do you think? PRINGE ALB it! ranelseo, “In all, forty of the leading newspupers of Latin-America learn golng on In the rest of the through the Assoclated Burglars Got Tips by Listening on Radios Chicago, April 22 (P—Willlam Schoeh, 87, & disbarred attorney be- lleved to be the first burglar to em- adio, and his partner, William | yesterday admitted | Iitzgerald, 47, entering more than 126 homes in the last vear. Echoch's pretty 22 year old wife, Marvel, acted as lookout. ‘They gained a line of prospective victims by tuning in on radio stations and listening to names and addresses of those who sent in applause cards, BANK TELLER JAILED Portland, Me., April £2 (P—Philip A. Smardon, former teller of the Iirst National bank here, was sen. tenced to four years in Atlanta peni- tentiary yesterday for embezzlement of $18,000 from the bank's funds. He had previously pleaded gullty in federal court TR e RED PEPPER FOR RREDHATIC PAIN| (oncentrated Heat Penetrates Instantly and Brings Quick- est Relief Known imatism, lumbago, neuritis, . 8tiff neck, sore muscles, strains, aching joints. When you (re suffering o you can hardly get around, just try *“Red Pepper Rub"” ind you will have the quickest re< lief known, Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers. Instant relief. Just as soon as you apply Red Pepper Rub you feel the tingling heat. In three minutes, it warms the sore spot through and through, tion, breaks up the congestion — and pain is gone. Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from red peppers, costs little at 1y drug store. Get a jar at once. Almost instant relief Use it for colds in chest. No mut- what you or congestion, don't fall to try Red Pepper Rub, For Free Sample Mail This Ad- vertisement to WHITEHALL Ine., N. Y. PHARMACAL cCoO., 598 Madison Ave, New York, P.A. is sold everywhere in Hdy red + pound and helf-pound tin humi. dor+.end pound crystal-glass humidors with sponge.moistencs top. And always with every bit of bite end perch removed by the Prince Albert process, awalts you. | | | | | | | Frees the blood clrcula- | | haye used for pain | 2 Ly 1926, Economy Days Friday and Saturday This Week Only Ladies’ Department 3rd Floor SPECIAL LOT Women's and Misses’ '19 Coats’] SPECIAL LOT Women'’s and Misses’ *24 Coats*) SPECIAL LOT Women’s and Misses’ 3 1 5 Dresses 'SPECIAL LOT Women’s and Misses’ "4 Millinery ‘4 $9.94 Girls” 5() 94 Coats Besse System Co., Besse-Leland’s Store