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Show THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Page Three ............. ............. ............. .. u ++++++i JACK QUINN NOT DONE AS HURLER i Finally Lands Major· Berth F OR some minor league stars the road to the big le11gues Is short sharp and sure. For others It Is a long and rambling trail mostly wind· lng through the me11dows and corn lands of many forms. And or lhls latter clnss none traveled a lon!!er track or sen·ed more time on f:mns than did Lance Richbourg, the BosBraves outfielder of lost season + tonRichbourg's haseba!l c11reer corers : a period of nine ,!'ears and exiPnds + from Florida to Mi<'hignn and fi'Om : Frisco bay to that buy whose water~ lap the eastern limits of Boston. He must hnve had n' lot of courage 11nd bulldog tl'nncity ueep In his hPart to : ha\'e surrived failure 1\nd misfortune :,so long nnll still had enough IPft to + win his goal. Hlchboll!·g was a student In the t:niLance Richbourg. + vP.rsity of Florida when ~IrGruw took : his Giar ts to Gainsville in the spring of the year 1019 t1 train. The + glitter of a big league training cump, of course, dazzled the eyes of : the roung collegtun nnJ he signed to play with McGraw. Be though: + he was an Infielder and he knew he could hit. He was ulso very fnst. : Well, McGraw farmed him to Oal;lnnd for 11 season and then recalled him and f~rmed him out again, thJs time to Toledo, and then traded him to the l'h1ls. lie could not seem to get into his stride. He showed flashes of hitting form that lured the big league managers oo, but he + never .seem€1(l to be able to win o regular berth. lie was farmed out to :t Dallas and later to Clmrlotte In the South Atlantic league. During the year he was with the Phils he warmed the bench, not appearing In a : ga~e. Nothing in this record to write back to the Unlvers!ry of Florida 'I' about and have posted in the gym about that institution's former star. Playing for Grund ({aplds In the Central league, Richbourg nit over .400. Finally he landed In Nashville with his big league career apparcntly at an end. Be. led t11e Southern league In hitting and was signed by Washington an(! immet!i::tely afterwurds proceeded to break his ieg. 'lhe Senators sent him to Minneapolis on the Matthews deal. Tbls was his seventh minor league stand and his third big league failure. NC'th+ lng daunted, this game Florida collegian started all over again seven : years after McGraw hod plucked him from his college campus and + played so well In the American a~sociation that Judge Fuchs hireil him In the fall of 1!126 to play the 1027 scaron for his Braves. Veteran Hopes for Three Years More of Work. l :t + ~ f :t .:* i ++ t+ : % t + + 1-Head-on view of the new plane built at SliD Diego, Calif., for Colonel Lindbergh, similar to the Spirit of St. but more completely equipped for night flying. 2-Scene at the funeral of the late Chauncey M. Depew In York• .8-New gas-proot uulform tested by ordnance omcers ot the United States army, which protects the WIUU'er at all points. REVIEW OF ENT EVENTS Germans and an Irish· Cross . Atlantic East to West in Plane. crossing of the north Atlantic by airplane Is an acllplllslled tact. Two Germans and an succeeded where French and had failed at the expense of lives. Baron von Huenefeld, HPnnan Koehl and Commandant E. Fitzmaurice of the Irish State air forces, starting from in in the Junkers plane Bremen, managed to get across the ocean safety. Encountering strong bend . and a heavy sno.w storm, they dered some four hundred miles U<tl'w'•ril of their course and finally, tanks empty, landed on Island in the Rtralt of Belle Thl'Y were only 100 miles from op<>n ~ea. The plane was slightly In Iandin~: hut the daring were unhurt and made their to a lighthouse, whl'nce news of arrival was SPnt out to an am:walting world. ISGUSTBD and Indignant ritlzPns of Illinois ga\·e the Smali-Thompmachine a terrific wallopIn the Repuhlicnn primaries and that they had In a measure rethe state and especially the of Chicago. Governor Small was for renomination by RecreState Louis L. Emmerson by of more than 400.000, Hnd Attorney Crowe of Chicago beaten by John A. Swanson by l!lB.OOO ·votes. Frank Smith. the United States senate reto seat after his election last went Into the discard, the sen nomination being won by Otis Glenn of Murphysboro. Big Bill mayor of Chicago, protagof the "America First~ camand rel(!ntleu enemy of King ot England, sought only one that of committeeman for his and the voters denied him even The same fate befell PresldPnt Board of Elducatlon ('oath who out Thompson's orders to disSuperintendent of Schools Me· congress and elsewhere great was expressed over the ~ilti<JD or the vetera11 Rept·P. Martin B. MaddeD of <'hi one of the most useful a11d llhionR members of the lower His constituency has become wholly negro, but he declslvPhls colored rival. For [l'etiSm,en-at-large the Repuhllcnn, Ruth Hanna McCormick.. ot the late Mark Hanna and ot Senator McCormick, and 8 dropping Congressman Yates. The voters of the state strong preference for Lowden nominee and he will least forty-nine of the state's at Kansas City. Democrats put through a practically uncontested and by preference votes determined Smith will have Hfty-two ·sure votes In the Houston comenhe may get the entire deleof fifty~lght. murder of a negro and severo 1 and assaults marked the primaries, but the picture of of slaughter and other presented In the press of Lonand Paris was sea reefy justiHed activities or the gangs of thugs worked for both the Republican After a tour nf lndlnna and the corn belt, Representative Dickinson of Iowa, Repuhllcnn and one of the ugrf. cultural leaders of the house, ore· dieted thllt Ir Hoover were the t:epubllcan nominee lnrllana woulrl gr• Demorratic in the full. ani! other states of the Midwest. normally RP publican, might follow sull S•'me of the party leaders' In Washington are beginning to suspect that Hoover mav not be the best vote getter a mung those seeking the Presidential nomination. lduho's delegation to the Bepubllcan convention will be solid for Senator Borah. members of the National Jtp. W ETpublican club gained a victo•ry when the nntlonal affulrs cmnmitteP of the club adopted a resolution ur~C Ing repeal of the eighteenth amendment. The resolution was to 'be presented to the full membership Tuesday of this week for action, and a hot fight 1vus anticipated for the drys were putting up a forceful oppos'tlon. The club, 1\'hose headquarters are In New York city, Is national as Its name indicates. l'resi<IPnt CoolIdge Is AD honorary president nnil among the members are Vire PrPsi- · dent Dawes, Herbert HooYer and ~·rank 0. Lowden B Y A vote of 53 to 2~ the senate passed the Mc:\'ary bill for ugri· cultural relief. \'al'lous amendments were first maue. but the equulization fee und other features olljectionuhle to the Presidenl remained untouched, and consequently his l'e!O was expected. lt wu• stnted ut the White Houre that Mr. Coolidge would like to help the farmers. hut CAnnot see that any good pnrT>OSe would be served by his signing the ~IcNary meusure. He Is com·inrPil the equall7.Ation fee would he <leclared nnconstltutional by the courts. The President al.so made It known that he wus not likely to sign the flood control bill unless It wns muterlally modltled. Elimination of local contributions. arcor<ling to his judgment, means that it becomes u matter of bestowal of fa vnrs upon certain localities. When one locality Is taken care of he thinks tt I~ Inevitable that other sections will demand action on the same basis. One objectionable feature from the President's ston(!polnt Is the provision under which the federal governmPnt presents a locality with valuuoiP property and then proposes to pay thP locnllty for damages. W ot Nebraska dlthelr preference votes beSenator Norris and Lowden, they renominated Senator HowThe Democrats were solid for M. EIItchcock for President. will send a solid delegation Republican convention In· for President Coolidge. Most ftmoda D delegates will be for and so will all of Michigan's. the progress made by the campaign, there were signs l:te:asll opposition to the nom!· the secretary of commerce. one-third Interest In a ranch and for Improvements to the property ~;ver hart said Sinclair neither asked nor received receipts for the payments Of the money paid $2'33,000 was In Libert.v bonds. [" A decision written by Chief Justice Taft the Supreme court ruled that congress has the power to delegate Its legislative authority to the President In the administration of the flexible tariff law. Justice 'faft In his opinion compared the delegation of power to that vested by congress in the Interstate Commerce com~Isslon which controls rallroad rates. He held that the tariff Ia w was designed to secure rHenue and that the declaration for p1·otect!on of domestic Industry did not fm·alldate it. Three opinions bearing directly upon current prohibition enforcement methods were handed down by the Supreme court. One, which sustained com·iction of an alleged dope peddler, was accompanied by dissenting vi~ws In which .Justice Brandeis sco1·ed the use of entrapment methods in law enforce-ment. i F • Sinclair RIAL of Harry F. for the alleged Teapot Dome conspiral'y got unner way swiftly In the District of Columbia Supreme court hecausP Justice Ba!lpy took the examining ot veniremen out of the hands of the lawyers and qualltled twel\·e jurors In three and one-half hours. One of the Hrst wltbe~~ses was Mabton T Everhart, eon-ln-law of Albert B Fall. He told the jury the whole story of Sinclair paying Fall more than $300.000 wlthln a few months after the then secretary of the Interior had turned the Teapot Dome oil reserve over to a Sinclair comp11ny. The money was paid ostensibly for a Young.'' t Quinn's real name ls Picus. He was born in Hazelton, Pa., and worked as a breaker boy lo the mines. His father was a Pole, und he had the peculiar Ideas regarding the upbrln!(ing of the young as sways those southern European nationalities. Money was made to be earned and not spent, and young Plcus learned his lessons of thrift md economy early. t++ t:+ + : + t English Tennis Star :1: ++ :+ rd: I Aaplrln Ia the trade mark: or Blyer Maouracture of M:ouoacetlcacldeoter ot Sall<rllcaettll SEEDS-PLAN TS-BULBS : Seeds, Baby Chicks, Bulb•. Plants, they all grow. Send tor big free poultry supply and seed catalo~. BAILEY & SONS CO .. Salt Lake. Utah. t : .. For Caked Udder and Sore Balsam of Myrrh The Engl!sh Ladies' Golf union has 1,035 affili!lted clubs. • • • Atlanta bas started construction of Its first municitJal golf course. • • • Los Angeles has name(! January 4, 1) and G, l!l~!l. for Its annual $10,000 open golf championship toumamcnt. • I capl- • I Graham ~lcl'lintock, Alahama Pn!l this pa~t season, wili help nuss Colwn, head coach, at L,misunu State next fall. ••• Horse raclng In und around Lex1 lngton, Ky., dates hal'k to 17S7, whPu contests frequently were broken ur, by IndiAn raiders. • • • University of Kentucky griumen will SPfCialize in wrestling and boxllng In preparutlon for the 1928 campaign on the gridiron. • • • All of the large unlversitil's of Japan have regular ski teams and the _sport Is recognized on a par with hasehall. rughy and other intercollegiate sports. I • • • UST why any Italians should de~Iorley Drury, southern Callfornin sire to kill that nonentity King grtd star this seaHon an~ aii-AmerlVictor Emmanuel !s a puzzle, but ca back, was pr~sented a _g1ft of $1,()()(1 they did attempt It, last Thursday ~In cash hy ndnurers ln hts home town A big bomb was exploded In Place recently. Julius Ceasare, Milan, while the streets were crowded with peopiP Univt:rsity of British Columhla at wafting for the king to arri 1·e for the Vancouver has ral~ed Cnnatli:m ;ugl~y opening of a trade fair. The mon-~ football to the statu~ of n nHJJOr spm t, arch had not renched the scene but and soccer has been relegated to a fourteen persons were killed and minor sport by a recent vote of the some forty Injured. students. J • • • I • • • S. A. McBain, f;anta Marla high school sprinter, equaleil Charle.v Pad dock's record of 9 3-5, for the 100-yard ilush In a track meet hetween Santa Marla and Callfor.Jia Pol.vtechnlc schcol of San Luis Obispo, In Santa Marla. • • • .Jerry Belan;;er, veteran first hase man, has signed a contract with Pittsfield of the Eastern league. Be was with Bridgeport last season. • • • Howard Llnclimol·e, int1elder belonging to the fcort Worth Cats of tht> Texas league, has been purchased by Little Rock of the Southern loop. • • • Steve Plesnik, a semi-pro outfielder of Newark, N. J., !;as been signed bl' Manager Cus Getz for his Scranton club in the :\'ew Yo,rk-Pennsylvania league. • • • The Athletics have one of the most mlunhle utility players In baseball in .Jimmy Dykes, a hard-hitter, who can play an.v position on the infield-and play it well. • • • f?our youn~ outfielders, Gib~on, Cui ver, ZitPimun and Glover, failed to fill the needs as seen hy Manager !•'rani: Snyrler at llouston. and were gil·en relea~es. • • • Catcher F;d Cousineau of the ~Ioble Bears had the first finger of his right lwnd so hn!lly smashed by a foul tip that he was put on the hospital list fnr a long spell. • • • Pitchers Hel'hert Rauding and E<l and Catrher Ray Ahern. all memhers of a Boston amateur team. ha\·e joined the Hnttie~hurg club of the Cotton Stn tes league. • • • JOHNSON'S pet BoulSi•;NATOH der Canyon dam bill, reported fa· oorahly by the Irrigation committee, apppren!l,\' Is r:nlng to have hard sled ding. Senator A8hnrst of Arlwna filed a mlno1·1ty r~>port assailing , the mensure as ''a recklPss and relentles~ assault" on his state. ARsertln~ thut the hill was dl'llwn wholly In the in terest ot l'alifornia. the Arizona ~en ntor declared that It "proposed to sever . Arizona's jugular vein," bv denying it rights to ln·lgatlon and power from the Colorado river. When the measure \\'US reported h_v thP committee, Senator Ashurst gav~ notke that he would conduct a filibuster. adding that if the proponents of thP blll expe<.:ted to pass it at this sesslop I the senate would sit "until the ides ot Nm•emher.'' I II HE.\TRICAL and automoblle Interests presented their best arguments to the senate finance committee for repeal of the admls.~lon The photogt·aph shows l1erher1 and automobile taxes. The theater 1roup, headed liy W Ullom A. Brady I Schwarze, the University of Wlsconand Frank Gilmore, said the legiti- . sln shot putter who is now a member 1 mate theater had been "handed the ot the lllin.ois A. C. team, and who ts worst of It" and that the spoken still another athlete who Is assured a drama had almost disappeared In I place on the American team. In the many states. The automobile men National- A. A U. Indoor l'hmnplnllpromised cots In prices equal to the shlps in New York, the (':HIIinnl nth 1 lete put the sho• ~lnsp to '\0 r., .. t tu If the latter Is removed. Il I I All 1\!akes. ~end your blades to our tar-tory to be rcnt>wPd nnd resharpc-ned better than when you boul::'ht thf'm. (ii,AH.\~TlUm \'}:1\Y ~H-~HP bladf·~ with cofn arul mafl to S.H'ET\' DJ..\J>t: ('0 .. 1~('. V\.~rap Stntion I{, Ocot. 210. J.o;; ,\nlft'h·s. CaUr. • • • Bra~·den Sure of Olympic Team Safety Razor Blades Only 2c Per Blade • • • Seconl1 Baseman Hay Moore and Pitcher Erl Tenney h:l\·e been sold to Jackson of the Cotton States league by Laurel of the same circuit. 1 I •• • Hl2!l. ••01 lor 1M .Uake $2:i to $30 U'f'e-kh·. working' evenings at home. Full uar·ticular" ror a stamped self· addressed em·e)ope. Pljtrey Co., Cincinnati. 0. Again they are talking about Tulsa and Oklahoma City entering the Western league, this time for the season of A ~'lorida paper sa,l's that Bobby Jones Is now a full-ftedged lawyer nnd will hereafter keep one out of a hole. •• • AU dealon on aall!orizod lo reluad 1aar lint bolllt if aol tailed. Babe Adams has qu.lt baseball, and he didn't even stop to talk terms with Connie Mack. Pocket Mdiai1on, lust season In the Texus league, has signed for a whirl at fin•t base with Raleigh of the Piedmont league. I ln caracas, FEDBRAL tal of Venezuela, bucked up T : : an antidote for pain. Safe, or physicians 'wouldn't use it, and endorse its use by others. Sure, or several million users would have turned to something else. But get real Bayer Aspirin (at any drugstore) with Bayer on the box, and the word genuine printed U. HANFORD'S H EDEI:AL Judge W. H. S. Thump son of Pittsburgh threw out of court the suit· of five former mem· hers of the Ku Klux klan to restralu the order from operating In PennsyJ. vanla, ruling that he was without Jurisdiction and that it was a matter for the stnte courts to handle. The opinion climaxed three days of sen satlonal testimony, dul'ing which ldansmen were charged with burning men all\·e In Texas; organizing a "uight riders" terrorist brunch in Oklahoma and Ohio; horse whipping "offending citizens" and cuusin!( riots and other disorders. + THERE Is nothing that has ever taken the place of Bayer Aspirin as Teata in Cowa Try Another opinion by university students, staged a revolt last week and engaged In a battle with loyal troops at the San Carlos barracks. The mutineers were speed ily defeated, se>eral heing killed and many arrested. Since early In ~eh I'Uary there have been student r10ts on various pccnsions In Caracas. In putting down these demonstration~ the government placed many students under arrest, and the casualties have been reported lleavy. •lo t +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ upheld the \'alidity of padlock injunctions against property Hen after an allpged violator of the dry law J,as llPen ousted from. the premises. The third sustained the con..-iction of .Tohn 1'. ~onnelle~-, f,ormer prohi~ltion admintstrator 111 :'\evad_a,• fo_r fa1lure to report an alle~:ed nolatton of the Yolstcau art for pt·osecution. troops + + lTH the warm approval of the • President, Secretary of State 1~:'\H Y f?ord ls visiting In EngKellogg Is moving forward on lite land and was the guest of honor way toward a multi-lateral anti-war at a dinner given hy the American treaty. With the co-operation of the Society of· London. It was announced French government he has sent note~ that the outomohlle manufacturer to Great Britain, Germany, rtaly and would tnnkP tlte tlrst speech In his Jo[llln asking those powers to state life, and lie ditl. hut It was only twen· their reaction to the proposal for the ty-nine words long. Said he: conclusion of a treaty· renoundn~ "J just wont to say Mrs. Ford and war as an Instrument of natlnnul D!yself are greatly honored tonl~ht policy. If the responses are favorable to be presem to meet so many dlstin· It Is hoped !?ranee will recede from guished representatives of two great her demand for the Inclusion of nu- nations. I thank you." merous reservations. T icPtrBL'~'"' NQ :t Forty-two years on this globe, twenty-seven of which have seen him In a baseball uniform, slaying foes Bild fejllng diamond enemies, Jack Quinn expects to round out three yeHrs more before he hangs up h!s glove and quits the game he love~. "The old soupbone sh(luld last about three more seasons," says thl~ t rare vintage twirler, the most competent workman now on the staff of 1 the Mackmen. "I want to ~ound out thirty years In baseball, ending my career in the major leagues," continued this husky '· son ot the anthraclte belt, "and that I will satisfy me. For I feel that It will stamp me as the oldest of all the pltchet·s In experience and sen·il'e, exceeding even Joe ~1cGinnity and \\'alter Johnson; yes, even old Cy Sam f?uyonRky, 11 high school star of Gt·eenville. S. C.. is to get a trial with GI'Penville of the Sully league. lie Is an outfirl<ler and reported to he an unusually strong hitter. • • • The first pla~·er to be signed by Dicl< Rudolph, new manager of the \Yaterhury Eastern league tenm, Is llnp Ca1·nes. a .l'<•ung right-handed pitcher, formerly of St. .John's a-;:ad· emy. • • • Bless Schlein and Sam Hlpa, two Dayton amateurs, have been signed by the flnytou cluh i~ the new Central league. l't'e~ident t'hfl Bartelme plans to gil•e promising Dayton youngsters a chance. The photograph shows Miss G11 endo!m St<>rrv, one of Englund's tE'nn!s champions, and an attractive memher of the younger ~et. In 1!)27, she. with Mrs. llill and Betty Nuthall, was the only point winner In the Wightman Cup International Team match held at Forest Hill, L. I. Sh~ looks forward to another visit to America. Navy Tentative Crew Is Up to Usual Standard Though the Naval academy rowIng squad ls much smaller than those of any of the colleges with which it will compete this spring, Coach Rich· ard A. Glendon has nsrembled a tentative first crew which measures up well In strength and stamina • witb navy crews of recent years. The cundldates, of whom there are 45 for the mrslty, are working hard, and every oarsman realizes that with an entry at Pougl!keepsie and a chance of representing this country iu the Ol,vwpics. l!l~S is a big year In intercollegiate rowing. 'l'he oarE"men are ull six feet In height or over. They are mostly of the rangy type which have formed the navy's best crews, and look ~olDiewhut heavier and ~tronger than the a l'erage <>rew of the past. Coach John O'Reilly to Prepare Karl Wildermuth 1---.,.----.. sprinter~." Lack of Seasoned Material Is Cause Ernest Sargent Barnard, pres· !dent of the American league. say$: ''There are just as many boys play ng ball today as there e\·er were. "The trouble Is not there. Base bali's trouble Is a lack of seasoned material." Mr. Barnard was commenting upon the stories that base, ball Is sliding to oblivion because no good material is coming up and because boys no longer care to play baseball. IDEA SHE KHJ GIJJG- .• \\'' \ \'\ ,~:::;: ~~~ m~ea~t~asf~~ . ·.·. "~: ~ about six years. :My nerves were ·<': .: : :· ~ , all to pieces. I v~. <· could not sleep ···· .,.,,. ,.~ end wasn't able to do my house·':·-· work. Now I feel . ' so much better! I sleep like a. a======~ babv. I can do all my l10usework, washing and ironing and feel fine all the time. I help my husband some in the field, too, so you see we have something to praise the Vegetable Compound for. I will gladly answer all letters asking about the Lydia E. Pinkham's medicines." -JilRS. LUTHER HIBBS, llox 6651 Westwood, California. ·'.· ••• ~· Aquatic Choir There Is u luke neur Hattl<'aloa, on the t>ast cunst of Ceylon. fumou~ for Its singing fish. The music heard on the surface of. the water Is suld to be cous~tl hy the opening and closing of the shells of hfl·alves. IN BAD HEALTH FOR SIX YEARS Rube Bressler, the hard hitting out· fielder of the Reds. became a .!"em· ber of the Brooklyn Robins. It Is re· ported that Bressle1 bought· his release from the Reds for $4,000, and got $~.000 for signing with the Robins. And yet hall plr.yers are supposed to hn ,." nonr bu~lness hends Gar ~eurly a dlird ot the territory of t11e continrn•al United Stutes was ont•e a pul't ot Mexil'o. It was acquirev hy the C'nitl'tl Stutes in three annex:ttlons The tirst WHS when Texas. which had rehPlled fi'Om Mexi<'O and set UJl a sepnrnte g9vernment, was annexed to tl1i~ country In 1845. 'l'he question of the Texas boundary ted to the ~l<'xlcon wat, at the concl,.sion of which our southern nell!'hbor ceded everything north of the Rio Grande und Gila t·!vers. I'D 18!\3 this country settled a number of questions of hou;Jdary, pi'Operty and damages by purchasing an atlditional strip of southwestern land from Mexico-the Gadsden purchase. Included in thl'~e three cessions n·ere all ot the states of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Nevada and t'alifornin; more than half of Colora ito. and purts of Oklahoma, Kansas and Wyoming. - • • • SI-\ES American Land Once Part of Mexico Usually Coach John D. O'Hellly of Georgetown university truck team, will preGlodrs- \\'bot's the harber's it,~h? pare nlneteen-~·ear-old Karl WilderGlen~a-Dtle~n't !t attack them In muth, his tleet-footed sprinter, for the the palm of the hand? Olympic tests with great care. In speaking of his protege, O'Reilly said: "WIIdermut Is only a boy and his [Pgs will get stronger. Be is exceptionally fast In getting awuy from t!le mark a td he E'till has ~omething left at the finish. He is " prrfect sprinter. "Lil;e Chet Bowm:111. liP 1·uns close ' Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable to the ground and lti' feet are never Compound Gave Her Strength more than a foot ami n halt fi'Om the grnund. Karl does not hl'in;.: ltis knees Arap::.hoe, Okla.-"! want to tell up high and his arm motion is excelyou just what Lydia E. Pinkham's lent. lie runs straight during the \'cgetable Com· ~,.:,::l:: : : : · :,: ,.: '... · pound has dono ruce and does not thrnw himself I against the tape like "'me of our · Travea Wuner is the best batter In the \Yaner family, according to his cousins, Pnul and Lloyd. Unless the cousins are just being kind, the Pirates must hare a sensation In young Travea. for IHst ,season Paul led the National league and Lloyd was third in hitting. • I Much •' : :,_ _.:' 'FLORESTON SHAMPOQ-Jooal for use In connection w1th Parker's llair Balsam. Ma.kes the halt so!t and flntiy. ~o cents by mail or II\ drug• 2iata. lliscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, H. y, ---COMPLEXION ·- -----~ IMPROVED ,,., ....... , ••• QUICKLY '""'" ""~' l::arter's Little Liver PHis Purely Vegelllble Laxative "\\o:~i!iii'!;,L move the howell free from pain and unpleaunt after •vatem. of con1tipa• tion poisoo.l which many time• e&UP·e pimp lei. Remember thev arc a doctor'• preacription and can be taken bv the entire family. All Drurgiota ZSc and 75c Red Packace1. effect~.- Thev relieve tbe CARTER'S ~PUJS |