The American Legion Weekly [Volume 4, No45 (November 10, 1922)] . pt that itfrequently gives an entirely inaccurate picture of con-ditions. A man who went to manufacturing $1,500 carsin quantity on any such basis would presently be inthe position of the fool and his money. NOVEMBER 10, 1922 PAGE 19< The Legions Own Olympics Louisiana Won theAll-round Cham-pionship, New YorkWon in Track, butEverybody Won aRecord for CleanSportsmanship ARE we growing old? Apparentlynot. We still can do the hundredyards in ten flat under adverse condi-tions. We still can broadjump morethan twenty-one feet. We


The American Legion Weekly [Volume 4, No45 (November 10, 1922)] . pt that itfrequently gives an entirely inaccurate picture of con-ditions. A man who went to manufacturing $1,500 carsin quantity on any such basis would presently be inthe position of the fool and his money. NOVEMBER 10, 1922 PAGE 19< The Legions Own Olympics Louisiana Won theAll-round Cham-pionship, New YorkWon in Track, butEverybody Won aRecord for CleanSportsmanship ARE we growing old? Apparentlynot. We still can do the hundredyards in ten flat under adverse condi-tions. We still can broadjump morethan twenty-one feet. We still canpole-vault eleven feet. At least, someof us can. Legionnaires from NewYork, Virginia and South Dakota didthose things at the Legions Own Olym-pics, held in conjunction with theFourth National Convention at NewOrleans. And scores of others, inother athletic events, showed thatsprinting, jumping and vaulting arenot the only accomplishments left to us. The Department of Louisiana wonthe Frederick W. Galbraith, Jr., Trophyfor scoring the greatest number of. Start of the three-milerun. Devaney, NewYork, the winner, isfourth from the , Nebraska,extreme right, finishedsecond Hughes, Louisiana,winner of the 56pound weight throw


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