I said, "Well, Mr. Warner, I don't believe President Lyman Wilbur ef your University, would be happy to see your face and our signature on every billboard in America, suggesting that the young at in America take up the cigarette smoking habit." , h Always a man of deliberate, taciturn, yot oratty reactions o- they called him "the old fox" <« = reflectodly turned to me snd said, "Yes, I guess you are right." ‘ He turned them down, en AF you knew wnt that meet in Oem Scobie Warner's reactions, you would have known that it was a great victory. Glenn Scobie Warner is Sootch. He never threw his money, emmys ‘ The next dey he quietly said to ne, "Do you know what was in that envelope?" And I said, "No, Mr. Warner, I do not.” a replied, “there were two $500.00 bills." " \ After Jim Bausch won the decathlon in the Olympic Geanea! in Los Angeles in 1932 he was considered the world's greatest alleround athlete. The tobacco interest obtained his signature, but Jim Bausoh did not win the \\ shampionship by training on cigarettes. No champion athlete one does. By observation these young boys watch a champiog sl dies end ere quick to learn that a champion cannot dissipate his energies end have \ enough left to meet the challenge of the challenger who is constantly coning | on -= coming on. Up through the hundreds and thousands of years men have \ been clutching at each cther’s throats. | Contact and combat have developed \ _ dn such a way that our youth play the games like the soldiers pley at war, but there are rules of the game in athletics that mist be followed - inhibitions that must be practiced. Education through play is obtained by following these inhibitions. ‘The Chinese philosopher says that our athletic games are merely a list of "don'ts".