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Show March 30, 1928 WESTERN GIRL .. ByTaking Lydia E. Pinkham'• Vegetable Compound . .. . ..... ................... ~ ~~ Marks News Notes STRENGTHENED • lll • BILL GUTHRIE IS BACK IN MAJORS Conger's Career AY CONGEh, Illinois A. C. star, whose recent trinmtllis oyer Lloyd Halu) nnd Dr. Otto l'el!zer hnYe tht·u~t h~m Into the to.p circle ot Olympic pro~pects, started outdlstanctng colll.!>etHot s In his own section eurly in his undergrndmlle duyt! at Jowu ::;tute U. The boy hung up his first record three years ugu when he broke the Mid·Western association outdoor record for the mile. 'The time was 4.2i, a tlgure which he ent considerably in Inter performantes. liP has run the quarter In 50 seconds, the half in l.~:J. and mile in about 4.1i. Conger at present holds the national mile title. In capturing It at 4:23 3·5 he defeated Nick Carter, who was the only athlete nesides Hahn to bent Edvln Wide In n mll(' scratch race. He ran the mile in 4.2::!2-5 last year In the Central Association chumpion~hips and won that title also. B~sldes scoring !ndh-ldual honor~ under the banner of low>l Stnte college, Cong~r was a meniber ot the reconl·hl·eaking two·mile t'Play Utah .................. ~ Manebester, So. Dakota.-"! was fD a terribly weak &l!d run-down condl• RICHFIELD-Crop outlook for the pre~ent year in Sevier valley Is par• . .. .·.· ... ., .. tlon when a friend Lydia about me told ··· · ·· Ueularly good, It has been reported. E. Plnkllam's Veg& The precipitation has been greatet table Compoond. I began takfng It and during the past month than at any after a ehort time other time during the past year. I felt better. We This coupled ·With the 'tact that are-• family of ftve and live on & 361). large run·ofr Is expected during the acre farm, eo I next ninety days, Indicates an ample have quite a good supply of water. The crop prospects deal to do both lu· for the present year appear better doors aad out. At than at any time for the past five first I was unable to do anything and had to have a girl, years. LOGAN-The acrea,ge allotted til but after taking the Vegetable Com· pound I finally gained my strength: Hyrum for the growing of beans has back and also gained considerable In been cut from 100 to 70 acres ac· weight. I will gladly answer letters cording to an announcement made by from women In regard to your medl• the Morgan Canning Company. Tht clne."-Mlls. OTI'O J. GEYD, R. F. D, l. decrease In acreage is due to the Box 20, Manchester, So. Dakota. shortage of bean seed, it is said fREA"ERl."-Near Loa Angeles. Modern of the canning company reOtllcials •qul-pment. Gross bustne88, $168,000 a year. Includes 1 acre land. Must sell for $120.000. requests have been sent to that port lr!any other bu1dneaseg for sale. Free llst on all part of the country,but additional rf>queat Gerard Remington and Co., Sa.lea Speclal1sts, 8 So. Dearborn St., Chicago; seed Is not a vallable. 710 Subway Terminal Bldg.. Los Angeles. RICHFIELD-Activity has been ~bolee Peace Blwer Farm Lands for Sale in t'latrmont, Grande Prairie & \Vembley Dlsts.• ln the potash property In the started 16 yn.' farming experience here. James "\\·heeler, Grande Prairie, A!berta, Canada.. White hills, five miles east of Marys· vale. A large tonnage af alulte rock has been located and a mill is being erected on the grou·nds to treat the Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh 1 rock and market it. The mill will Jlonoy baek for l!rst bottle If oot toltod. All doalen. have a capacity of twenty·five tom . each eight hour. j MANTI-Establishment of an egg candling and grading plant as Manti :which Is calculated to increase the • payroll for producers in Sanpete 1 county from $100,000 yearly to $50Q,. he you getting "yours," or are bodily infirmities holding you back? The . 000 "1thin three years 'time, was sprightliness of youth, health, strength, i announced recently by Albert us Wil success may be yours if you keep your assistant manager of the 1lardson, $ystem in order. Utah Poultry Producers' Cooperative 1association. OGDEN-Another large school build !i)\~HAARLEM~ ing approximately eight mlles wes~ ot CAPSULES the city was assured Monday mght lnd plenty of fresh water will worJa WOil"' den ffM' you. All druacit.tl; throe aiz.ea. at a meeting of the Weber count' Aceept no aubatltutea. !board of education. Construction is 11to begin at once and contracts for the More Eggs-More Money building have been awarded botb f01 TJot .llf. 11/•tr.tt~ nJULTllY MACAZINB 1general contracting and the plumbing loadts Tells what you mwot know to ' ...,. succeed with poultry. Facts ( f., ~ and heating apparatus. based upon experience. Send 10• C dime LOGAN-Utah's fruit industry Is today for Special trial offer. Poultry Book Catalog Free I _ · 'rapidly coming to tbe f ont in the in· The Poultry Item, Box 101, SelleravUlo. Pa. termonntain region. It has taken an added impetus this last year and bide New Idea in Football While 1 fair to exceed all state ricords. 'l'he fame of the Shoele~s Wonders trultgrowers and packers are stressing football teum of the Presbyterian \plantings of all kinds, some special orphanage nt Lynchhurg, Ya., Is ·stress has been made of late by the The orphanage teum state tor a greater l)lanting of cherries ~prea<ling fast. pos,esses only one football ~hoe, dis- i -especially sour cherries. cat·ded by the I.ynchburg high school. j SYRACUSE-Local farmers visited This ~hoe Is used by the player who various farms in Morgan today and does the kltking and as soon as the bought three tons of certified potato Joigskin ~tarts flying through the air, seed and some certified grain seed the shoe Is discarded. "'lou cnulrln't Individual farmers are planting demon· put shoes on those kids If ~-ou want stratton plots to help the seed busi· I'll to," says Dr. \Yillium )lt>ginson, ness and the community and for test <uperintendent of the Ol1Jhannge. "I lng purposes. Farmers are just be be!ieye tlmt the renMn they win so ginning to plant, according to L. E. many games Is that their opponents of the local f.arm wake fun of their bare feet and try l WIJiiams, president is needed. moisture more but bureau, to step on them. This makes them I mad; they dlg their toes in and plow 1 HEBER CITY-armers of Utah plan to sow more acreage of corn, spring through." wheat, oats, and barley and slight!' less potatoes and tame hay this spring The Troubleaome Part than was sown for the harvest of 1927, Tencher-How did ~·ou get along to report of Frank Andrews, according with your home work? for the department statistician Utah Junior-! think I ndded the zero~ agriculture. of ~ all rll'(ht, but I'm not so sure about SALT LAKE-Funds to be speni the figures. for the maintenance and repair of roads in Utah this year will include Wute Matter Retained in $1,700,000 to be furnished tQ.e statE the Syatem ia the Greatfrom the federal government's road appropriation. eat Barrier to Health Yakima, Wash. - "Dr. Pierce's CLEARFIELD-One thousand acret Bl-nt Pellets have been my fa· i of canning tomatoes will be grown in vorlte fam!ly medicine for many Tbey will 1Clearfield, Utah, this year. years. They relieve packing for canneries , be sent to seven one of liver trouble, 1 and marketing. ald digestion and are very good for CITY-Elias Jensen I BRIGHAM ! ny disorder of the manager of the Paramount hatchery stomach, b II I o u B· of this city, is errectlng a large tur· ness or bilious sick· key brooder on his property on Easi headaches. I tblnk they are the very Third North street, having decided to best regulator of engage in turkey raising on a large the stomach, liver scale. The brooder is of the Califor· an d bowels that nia type, new to this section. anyone can take. They keep one's system In perfect COALVILLE-Placing of earth em· condition It taken as dlrected."bankment in the downstream face of Mrs. W. J. Andrews, 602 Broadway. Echo dam, being built for the United " QPtaln a vial of Pellets now of States bureau of reclamation by A. your druggist and see how quickly & Company, Contractors, was Guthrie you'll feel clear hMded-fnll of vlm started the past week. Frost conditions and vitality. 60 Pellets for SOc. which have been adverse to this work, a t· 3 i .======= I I I 1 Quickly Relieves Rheumatic Pains 12 Days' Free Trial To g('t relief wl1en pain tortured joint,; and mu~cles lteep you In constnnt misery rub on Joint-EaH!'. It lR quickly absorbed and you can rub It In often and exped re~ults more speedily. Get It at any druggist In America. Use Jolnt-EMe for sciatica, lumbago, sore, lame mnRcl!'s, lame hnck. <·hest colds, sore nostril~ and burn· lng, aching feet. Only 60 cents. It • 11enetrates. Send name and Address for 12 FREE day trial tube to Pope Laboratories, Desk 3, Hallowell, Maine. _Joint· Ease SEEDS-PLANTS-BULBS Your succe.s Is sure with P. W.'s lll<funtaln Grown Tested Seeds and Re· li•'>le Trees. Write tor large Illustrated catalog giving full details. Porter- Walton Co., Salt Lake. ---- THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS ..•,. ........ . ' ··-··· --~ ·-· . )( Ray Conger. team which romped to victory over so many Mid-Western oppoll<'nts. • After he was graduated In June, 1927, he stayed on nt the college In order to do further work in physiology and physical education. He bas been conducting a series of experiments to distO\'P.r now diet affects vigor. Conger wished \·ainly that he iulght try out llis schemes on athletes, bt.t, falling that, experimented with rats !nsteud. According to the last reports be found rats fed u balanced diet showed more energy than the vegetarian rats. Conger was one of the strong middle distance cnndidutes for the United States Olympic team anyway, but his wln over Doctor Peltzer, followed by hls extraordinary feot of making the 1.000 yards In 2.11, thus beating Hahn's record, unquestionably put him in the front row. Lawson Robertson, Olympic coarh, bdieves Conger has Improved aston\ ishingly In the last few months and will be In e\·en better form for outdoor competition. Lust sear Conger traveled abroad with Henry Cummings of the :-lewnrk A. C., and Jackson Scholz of the New Yot·k A. 0. While In Paris he ran against Seraphln Martin, the famous French middledistance star, and made the half mile In 1.53. Model37 Six·tube, FULL-VISION Dial, self-contained A. C. set. For use with 110·115 volt, 60eyele, Alternating Current. Uses six A. C. amplifying tubes, and one rectifying tube. sg2 without tubes Election Year Is Big Hope of Brooklyn Robins other-the new, seH-contained A. C. set-the Atwater Kent 37. Batteries can't run down-for there are no batteries. The house current costs only a fraction of a cent an hour. And the FULL-VISION Dial, which you read at a glance! How swiftly and surely and clearly it brings in your station! The modern, eatin-finished cabinet is no larger than a child's suit case. The price is compact, toobecause public demand has permitted us to effect amazing economies of manufacture. Tlie program you can't afford to miss is EVERY NIGHT. Listen with the Atwater Kent 37. You'll see! Tunney is signed to fight twice. This Is the year the Brooklyn Rob Man! What a year-by radio. • Ins ha,·e waited four yeat·s for. EvAnd the programs NOW. Toerv Pre~ident:al yenr the Rollins do a night! Tomorrow night! The headlot of high flying. and Cncle Wilbert liners of music-of politics-of Robinson has hls flock all lined up to everFng-are on the air-NOW. go some place In 1928. Don t put off buying your new 'rhe Robins rode into R pennant In HllG with Woodrow \Vilson, waited Atwater Kent A. C. set until the : four years nnd triumphed along with last moment before the conven· • the Republicans and Warren Harrting tions. Enjoy the wondedul things In 1!120, and flnlshed second in 1924 radio brings now. When summer nfter giving the Giants a run for their comes-you're ready. money. Get the set that's always ready• With the best balanced pitching and for a convention, a concert, a fight catching staff~ In the National league Model E Radio Speaker $26 lust season , the Robins could not get or a frolic-the modem set-the ••• • • • Radio's truest voice. All parts protected out of second dl\·ision because ot set that has changed everybody's moisture. Comes in a variety of against going IS radio-that of conception weak hitting and sloppy fielding. color combinations. beautiful any than homes more far into The Robins finished last In both fielding and batting lust Y.ear. Har· Atwater Kent Radio Hour every Sunday night on 23 associated statioru 1·ev Hendrick was the only player on Larry Gilbert, Jr., age thirteen, and On Dial Recei•er• listed lUldet U.S. Patent l.OU,OO% t11~ team to finish the season with a his Lake View Stars are hard after Indiana university has listed 15 dual batting averuge of more than .300. the junior baseball championship of tennis meets for the season. COMPANY Thirty-six athlete~. Including eight- ATWATER KENT MANUFACTURING the world, to be dPcided this year In Philadelphia, P• A. Atwater Kent, Preaident een new faces, reported to tbe Robins' 4.700 Wissahiekon Avenue a nation-wide boys' baseball corupe· John "Rasty" \\"right, left-handed training camp at Clearwater, Fla. lf titlon being sponsored by the Amerl· pitcher, has been signed by the 1.\os Overlooked Opportunity Liked 'Em Well Done all of the new talent comes around as can Legion. The Stars are the tlrst ton BraYeS. Odam of Dubuque, Iowa, who James Cannibal's Daughter-Soy, ma, I'm expected the Robins may be the surteam entered in the competition and IllS one hundt·edth celebrated has • going to bring a young man home for prise club of tbe league. they are getting In some good pracrecalls that he annh·ersary, birtllday Sport Stat!stlc-'l'lrer·e will be one dinnPr tomorrow night. tice at their home In i'iew Orleans 'be· more Moore on the Yankee roster this years ago to 60 opportunity an had ~Iother-AII right, dearie. but get ~~****~*~~%~%~~~%%~~ fore the boys In the northem states season, instead of one Moore. and Mad!· State at lot corner a buy hlm here early enongh. You know how Larry Is tiH' son ~nn start playln~. $100, but for Chicago, streets, son your futh!'r raYes oYer tough stewThat high. too w11s price the thought Atcording to an old·time baseball Capp~r·s Weeldy. corner is now worth millions. catchPr, Zlegf<•ld's ban hereafter on Hubby'• Argument 'l"he UniYerslty of Cl1icago thin girls in his chorures is the sume ~ ~. came for from winning the Big ns culling for an outcur1·e. Persons who are locked In slumber :\Irs.-1 hat woman turned up her ~ Ten football championship last ~ are contented prisoners. .• The Holy Cross relay temn. winner ~ fall, but tt hns wor, from the ~ · nose at ~~Y ~on~. just sho\\mg h~r ('ity of Chlcn"o official recognl· • 1 )Ir.-I Job,lbl~ ik of ,tht> mile run In the recent Mill rose A man is never ~o easily decelvecS cont!'mpt, mv dear, for a man who d hl t d" ·1 • f others• · · Psmnns spor goo o on t games, Is said to be one of the best as w11en t ry 1ng t o de cen·e pay so much money for one. f 8 esolu d "' • 1 relay quurtet~ In the East this year -~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - r ,.,ngrosse ropes o ~ tion adopted by the Chicago The Memphis Southem ussurlntion ~ council ltnye bl'en presented to .: Coacl1 A. A. Stagg and Capt. buseball club has tul'lled m·er rrunc·is O'Neil, right-hand pil<'her, to Knox~·~ Kl'n Rnuse. . ~ Tl1e I'esolutlon 1·eads: l'ille of the South Atlantic ns~9clu I • Chlrago of City the "\Yhel·eas tion. i' will good he . by pl'ltspet·ed IHIS ~ • John ~lc~!ullnn. former :\otre Dmne >;: nf lwr nmha~sarlors in sportsgrid stnr, who nnw Is an as~i~tant ~ rnunsliip nnd hu~iness; thf're- " ~ coarl1 111 ("r~i;.:htnn unl\pr,it_v. Is 111 "' fort> b2 it "RPsniYPd, That the city conn- lit the potato llll~iness In oiT seu~nns at ~ a[l[Jl'eclutlon of ;. ' t•il ('hiC'ngo. the lnrJomituhle '1 will' tight• Rill Essi<'k, senut for thr ~!'IV Yorl; ~; in!! spirit of the UnlYersit~ of ~ ' Yunl;pes. hns hren ~ignl'<l tn en'il'h "· r "l1ira~o fnnthall team, whose *, 'f'IPndir] t•econl rluring, the sea- ~ the lloli)'WIHHI Rtars of ti<P l'>lf'ifk ;# ~\~ is n trihute not only to • son :.; COHf't Iia!';t~hall !Pagur in tlwir ~prin:.! A HH>S Alonzo Stagg nnd ~ 'narh I 7,·~ t1·ninin:! Bon~<'. hut to t11e dty ~ t\t•n 'upt. 1 ,;, • • • ~t ns wf:lll.'' ('hi<':tf:o of ~;:~ ·Rattliug LeYinsk~·. rx-liglll-hPIIYY .. ......... .. ........... . Juniors to Battle for Championship of World m:rmmmm • • • • • ~ • • • Praise Chicago for Its Sportsmanship ~ • • • ~ *I * • • • ** *~~ • • • Larry Gilbert, Jr. have improved . within the last twa 0 , Lurrs Gilbert, 11 ,; 1uager of t liP :\ew weeks to permit commencement on • Ol"leau~ PeliC'uns 111111 a fttl'lliPI' Boston this feature of the dam. Work on th_e outfieldPI'. lie Is taptaiu 11 nrl spcond excavation of the outlet tunnel I! \lasPmun of the team. being carried on. ~lo1·e thflr, fo,lKlll IHtys' ll':tlllH will EPHRAIM-S. S. Van Boskirk, Fred tom pete in tile play fur the junior Christensen and Pan! Thompson made I'I'Ol'ld's cl111mpion~hip, uccordln~; to snow reausements at the Experiment the estimate of D:lll Sower~. national atatlon at Alpine · and on the head ol J!ireNor of Ame1·icunism of the Le Seely creek recently. They report glon. in chat·ge of the Legion'~ h<tse· The National nnd forty-three inches of snow at the Ex- hall program. periment station, with a water content Amerlrun lengues lwve app!·opt·iuterl of 10.30 inches. At the Alpine they ~.iO.lXIO to undPn\Tile th~ expen~es of found fifty inches of snow, witk a u·anspnr!lng the junior teams lo elimination tournaments. and th<'s 1Ylfl water content of 13.20 inches. pntertuin the winnln~ t<>am at the big GREEN RIVER-Keith Smith, coun· world series. ty commissioner, merchant and leadIng woolgrower of Daggett ·county Utah, was in Green River recently. The tit·st dissenting l'olce to the He reports sheep as having done wonderfully well this past winter all along crowning of Ed (Strnngl<or) Lewis the north side of the Uinta mountains. lil'lll'yweight wrestling chrnupinn as 11 Grass was so short last fall, he states, r·esult of hls victory m·er ,Joe i'itether that all of the livestock owners bought was raised by the i'iew York Sta"e hay and field pasturage extensively, Athletic commission. Declaring its but the winter has been so mild an~ own "lnl'estigntlon"_ had estnilllshed the biowse better than anticipated Hans Steinke of Germany us pos· that much if it will not be used, whlll se~sing the best title claims. the cornonly about· half of the corn has be~• mission dPclared it would not re(' .. gnize Lewis. required that was anticlpatt~d. Deny "Strangler" Lewis Gehrig's Big Record Babe Ruth hlt 00 home runs last season, breaking his own and the world record for four-baggers. Tlils was un astonishing feat, but not near· ly so astonishing as the accotuplishrnent of Lou Gehrig. Gehrig hit. 47 homers, the largest number ever cretl Passing Observation ' !ted to any player outside of ltuth. The trouble with these "Do You Nearly eversbody was sure that Ruth Want Monel'!" nds Is that when you would some day smash his record of rend tl1em you always discover you ~!1- 1.\ut nobody f!YCr suspected that either have to work for It or mort· Gehrig would break through with a gage something to get lt.-Clnclnnatl total of 47. Enquirer. i 1 wel!,:ht cllt!lllpion. holds a re<'rll·cl of hr11·ing fnu~ht fifly ·ninP tilll!'S in mil' JP:I!', a lll:lrl; pmhahl,r that will neYel he Plltl:IIPrl. • • • The ream I 0 f t he I Tobacco * crop c * • • ,. I ~ The weight of a body is the measure of the attraction that exists between the earth and thnt body. The weight of a body, therefore, decreases with the Increase of distance from the center of the earth. -------- I What a year lor listening% Don!'t be left out Variation in Weight W. N. U., S1lt Lake City, No. 13 .. 1928. tl' I TODAY'S WINNERS l -~· If a sautllot umpl!·e had not taken a punch In the no.;e ami then hlt the high spotH to escape n bunch of Irate fans, William J. Guthrie, appointed un American leagu<o umpire recently, might never haYe become a baseball nrhltrntor. Bill happened to be watching the game in question on oue of the Chl· ca~:o sandlot diamonds, ami when the unfortunate umpire escaped offered to take hi~ place. That wns Guthrie's start. In 1007 he broke in liS a Western nssodut!on umpire. nc was In the Central II>SOtintion tl1e following seur and was traded to . e Wisconsin lengue near the end of that season. lie remained 1 In that cti·cuit until I!JO!l, when he switched n~:nin, this time to the AmerIcan aFSociation. Hls stay there was short. After remnining a month In the Three·Eye IPague <1\ll'ing the Hlll I camp~ign he went to the International league, wher·e he stuck it out for three se11sons preparatory to entering the ma,lors as 11 mPmber of the National league stall' in 1913. Bill made good In the big league until BriC'k Owen~ und he incUI"red the enmity of P1·esldent Tom Lynch and both drew their releases. Far from benten, Bill chased out to the Pacific ('oast loop the same summer pRESIDENTIAL YEAR! Politics popping all over the lot! nnd 1\·orked there until 1020. Remember "Twenty-four votes The following ~~11son found him bncJ.. In tile Western league, and a for Underwood" four years ago? h ll He l'ear later the Southem league. Remember how you said the t ri • "d • came hark to tile American league in HJ22, hut was not reuppolnted for of that one convention repa1 1!123. Rarl1 he went to the southern many times the price of your radio tengue and switched lwtween that clr- ~et? Remember _what you misse~ cui! anrl the Pad fie Coa~t until 10~7. tf you had no radio-or a poor one. This yearradio is playing a much when he worked satisfactorily In the \ big~er part. Both part~es a~e P.reAmerican league. panng for a campaign tnnde American homes-by radio. For Galled Horses i I ·~ Started Career as Substitute on Chicago Sandlots. R It'• a Privil•,• to Liue in aAW 'Milll141 .. Page Seven THE MIDVALE JOURNAL expre~s it~ ';# :.'t -.':-;'::~-..:~>;','..~~~*'"(~{"i_·-.1-;',~1.~11:-%%%:X'i"';.%.::?7f.%%i!i/J Trying for Olympics OnP of the ho~·s tryin~ out ll'itlo IIi~ t 'l<'Yelanrl rlnh i~ pa~·in~ 1·1• Oll'll PXJlf'Usts.. lie nli~l l t rual\e thP otlwr ti",\'Ollt~ l'lli~P .k:Jiou~ in pa,v. hy ghin~ hirt•'"il'lt 11 Paul Waner, • • • 'l'Px !Utl;ard will nol toRe hf'nrt as long 11~ tile hnxing fnns ~how no Bl:!n~ Voted Most Valuable Player in 192 7 National League, Says Luckies Do Not Affect His Wind l'etil·ing hPrnuse of eye trouble hrou~ht on hy straining optirs frou• tile $!\ Rrnts of • • • A l'tlltl'otlrer buq;lar i~ J'('pm·t~d to lial'e ('nnfess~d lo a former ra1·eer as a profrsslnnal hall pla~er. This must hal'e ht>('ll ~arhl<-'d in transmission Wasn't he an umpirl!? • • • .Jollll Hall, SPattle's oetogennrinn !(Off nr!'hitt>rt ••nd ~ou1·se builrl!'t', date' his nrtil'iliPs with the game har·k nf'Hrl.v three quarlt'l'~ nf a century, to his hoyhoorl days in En~lanil. • • • 1\'illium Miller. rlghl·lltmr!Prl pitch· l't', wiih (Jmalm of the 1\'eslem league twn ~·pnrs ngo. lias heen signed hy the Cin!'innutl Heds. ~Iiller formei'l,l slat·r('t] with Lorola uuirerstly of Chi ca~o. • • • Burleigh Grimes, who was traded to the ...Pirates 11 few dnys ago by the Giants, was with the l'il·ates In 191'i for the first big league trial. • • • Although Tony Canzoneri, featherweight champion, Is from :\ ew Or· lean~. he ltas n~ver boxed there as u professional. • • • Sale of John King, outfielder, \"oted most ,·aluahle player In the \\"estern as~odatinn la~t year, to the Sprinl!'fidtl (Ohio) club of the new Central IPn!!nc. is announced. ~lajm Goudsell-and that's his rwuue and not a title-takes a !Jit of "o-kull" practice every duy. Gootl~ell has held the world's scull championship slx times and is busy training In San B'rancisco bay, getting ready for tbi Olympic games tryouts. Toledo Gets Matron The ~Iutron Stake for three-year· oltl trotters, sponsored by the American Association of Trotting Horse Breeders, hus been awarded to the Toletlo Driving club untl will be rnce<l during the July 9 to 14 Gmnd Circuit meeting hclrJ at the Maumee Valley track. The estimaterJ Yalue of the purse Is :::n,ooo. The event will bring together the hest of the three-yenr·old trotters of the Unlterl Rtates, and It Is expected Canarla will S!'nd ~ome ~need en.'. "When I first started to smoke I was anxious to find a cigarette that would give me pleasure without taxing my wind or ir• ritating my throat. I soon dis· coveredLuckyStrikes. I am very fond of the excellent flavor of these cigarettes and they keep my throat clear and do not affect my wind in the least." Ci028, The American Tobacco Co., Inc. |