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Show THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Wildcat Football a la Hanley FAM llY DOCTOR LEARNED THIS ABOUT CONSTIPATION Noted Dartmouth Quarterback Hurt in Yale Game. · Dr. Caldwell loved people. His years of practice convinced him many were ruining their health by • careless selection of laxatives. He determined to write a harmless prescription which would get at the cause of constipation, and correct it. Today, the prescription he wrote itt 1885 is the world's most popular laxative! He prescribed a mb..-ture of herbs and other pure ingredients now known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, in thousands of cases where bad breath, coated tongue, gas, headaches. biliousness and lack of appetite or energy showed the bowels of men, women and children were sluggish. It proved successful in even the most obstinate cases; old folks liked it for it never gripes; children liked its pleasant taste. All drugstores today have Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin in bottles. The name of Hanley Is closely associated with the v!rtories and traditions ot the varsity of Northwestern university. There are tllr.:!e of them, all brothers, on that notable football aggregation this season. They are shown here talking lt over: Dick Hanley, head grid coach, at left; and his brother, Pat, on<~ of bis assistants, at right; give Lee, the "kid" brother, the deep lo\l·duwn on football a Ia Hanley. •• • ••• •• • • Longest Football Sprint in History :• Thomas Mosser of Newark N. J'., made the longest football run In the history of the game. Mosser was downed on the two· mlle line. Be was driving past ARhland stadium, where a game was In progress between two blgh school teams. One of the strong-kneed scholastic stars punted the ball over the wull and It landed In Mosser's car. Mosser knew that In a baseball game, whenever a ball goes over the fence or Into the stands, It belongs to whoever gets lt. But the high school player!' came after their ball and saw It disappear down the street In Mosser's car. They called a patrolman, who mounted n col · Jegiate roadster and went in pursuit. Two miles Inter the policeman caught Mosser. Oeceptio"d Mabel Walker Willebrandt, although doing man's work, often proves that there Is vel'y little of the masculine ln her life and her loglc. She is as thoroughly feminine ur. her sisters of the kitchen and the sewing cirrle. At a luncheon not so ver) long ago she said: "It's a wise woman who makes her husband feel he Is the hend of the bouse when be Is only chairman of the entertainment <·ommlttee."-Exchange. NERVOUSNESS Helpfully treated with This Famous Aid Jt yOQ1" net"Vea are Jumpy o.nd e-.ery llttle nolse or lrregula.rlty annoys you--YOU NEED KOll:NJG"S NERVINE. Thill world-famous. tried and te:sted medlain.al aid baa auc.,.,.,.rully ~.>roved lt.s great beneOei&J wortb In the treatment ot Sleepl-nea~. Nervoua IndJgeatlon and Nervou. Irrltabilli:y. Agencies All Over the World AT ALL DRUG STORES Generous FREE Sample Bottle sent on Requ'* Eoenhl Medlellte Co· Dep~. • • .. • • • • + ~ ~ • • • • • • • • • : Babe luth S[Jent most of his time this fall playing golf In the vicinity of New York. • • • The Marines probably will play a college team on Armistice Day, 1930. In Roanoke, Va. • • • •• • • • • • The new stadium at University o1 Alabama, Tnscnloosa, Ala., seats 15,()()(! and cost $300,ooo:· • • • Shorter el(hibitlon game programs are planned for several major league teams ne.xt spring. ~ .. • • • .. A national championship for golf clul> champions will be staged at St. Augustine, Fla., beginning January 15. • • • •• Dave Bancroft has signed a oneyear contract with the New Yorl' Giants as conch and assistant manager. • • : • . • • + .. Connie ll!acl•. Jack (~ninn. Ehmke and Jimmy l•'oxx-as fl\r as the rec· ord shows the Athletics nre the only four-generation ball club_ "Gabby" Promoted • • • In five years of scholastic and colle giate football, "Buddy" Ruckman, Uni\"ersity of Tennessee halfback. h:v· n~ver l)layed on a losing team. 0809 1t45 No. Wells St. Cbl.,.go, m. • • • John Pesek, prominent wrestler, h!!~ had more thnn sixty wrestling bouts in A ustralla since the first of the year wit:JlQut losing a single fall. Camouflage for Mlce Camoutlage, which helped to win 1 lhe World war, is being employed ln I Europe to catch mice. On the theory that rodents of today know their traps, inv~;-ntnrs have produced, for use In II office desl,s, a mouse-catcher shaped 1 like n harmless paper clip. Another, ! for general use, resembles an old tin can whose top closes suddenly. Still another resets Itself automatically to catch mice all night and dump them into a vat of water. • • • The University of Wisconsin hn~ had rowing for 35 yeat·s. There 81J candidates out this fall for the crew which rows daily on Lake Mendota. I Cannibal Fish Trapped G. L. Erl\enbrack of Republic, Kan., went fishing. caught a two-pounder and staked It to the river bank during the night. Next morning, so be says. he found nn eight-pounder had swnl· lowed the smaller fish and was caught by the stick through the gills of the two-pounder. • • • Johnny Hughes of Bayonne, N. J .. bowled thirteen straight strikes for a score of 200, bis tit·st ball being nulli· tied when he stepped over the foul line. • • • Charles "Gabby" Street, conrh and scout for the St. Louis Cardinals, hn~ been named manager of the team by President Sam Rreadon. Be !!UC('eeds Blll McKechnie, who signed to man · age the Braves. Street, for year!', wa:; Wolter Johnson's catcher at Wasb l lngton. As nice as we- are in love, we torgive more faults in that than In frif'ndshif) .-- R PlHY II orne. The longest drop kick on record, sixty-th1·ee yards, was muile by Pa_ynf' of Dakota Wesleyan In n gume against N. W. Normal <'OIIege on October 16. 1915. • • • The HJSQ Paciflr Coast league baseball season will extend over a period of twenty-eight weeks. start two weel;s earlier than usual and continue be· yond the world serie!!. .." Gridiron Star Gives Pants for Alma Mater Connie Mack withdrew a waiver on Harry Heilman so that Cinrinnuti might buy him from the Detroit Tigers. Heilman had been with Detroit for more than a decade. Butch Slderkowsld rivaled the le· gendary gridiron heru who was willing to "die for dear old Rutgers," when he gave his pants for dear Olrl St. Bonaventure tn a game at Olean. N.Y .. with St. Vincent. I .Sklerkowsk! broke away for a 45 yard run and what ap[Jea•·ed to be a certain touchdown. only to have Kunz· ler, St. Vincent snfety man, grab him by the pants. "Butrh" continued his ef· torts to get away and flnnlly broke lose-leaving most of bis pants be· bind. l Despite J..o!s Jack- of attire Skier, kowski resumed Ids jaunt toward the goal, but the delay had ennhled St. Vincent tacllleJ·s to catch U["l and he was drowned on the 10 yard line. The gam-e was delaye1l while the embarrased Skierkowski exchanged pants with a St. Bonaventure sub· stltute. 1 • • • The introduction of the khaki dress by soccer refel"ees opernting In Srot· land was recently carried out without commotion, nn(J H will cause no sur· prise lf the Eng-lish league shortl:v fol· lows suit. . • Booth Is Marvel I down."-Mrs. Oscar Ott-.Jm, Box 474, Thief River Falls, Minn. IStumpf Stumps Himself in Salt Lake Contest ! I It Is almost with munot onons r~gu· l larlty t.llnt stories of Bill ~turnnf mnkP their way out into the world. "The ecrentrlr infielder wal-l alwnys up to something. Here's another one to add to the list: Whil~> vlnyfng shortstop out at Salt Loire Clt:y, Stumpf woulrl s~nnd up and yell over to the seeou" hnsemnn any tim~ dUI·ing t.he g:,mP: "Iley. what tnwn nre we ln ?" "This is Snit Lal\e," the second [ sacker wnuld rt>~li.V. ''1fhan~ right." Stumpf would rE•memher. "How many out?" "Why. you crazy sap, there's two out." "That's right. !f there were three out we'd be on the bench, wouldn't I l we'l'' College football has lost one of tts most brilliant stars and Dartmouth Is robbed af the services of Its greatest backfield ace with the an· nouncement that AI Marsters has played his last game of intercollegiate football. The announcement followed an Xray examination of Marsters by Dr. .John Glle In which It was disclosed that the quarterback was sut'ferlng from a fracture of the vertebrae when he hobbled from the bowl during the Yale game. Be will be In the Infirmary for the next month while his t~am· mutes battle Brown, Cornell and the Navy. The Injury was officially described ns a fracture of the right transverse process at the third and fourth lumbar vertebrae, but Is not expe<-ted to haYe any permanent effect. MesRages of regret from all points of the country were pouring ln on Marsters. - The Naval academy has been asked to tal\e part In !nternotlonal athletlca through the r,equest of the AngloAmerlran baseholl club o1 London, F.ngland. that It send the midship· man hasehHll team across the Atlan· tic for n l!llme wlth that club's nine. Lleutennnt Commn"n der F. G. Relnlcke, graduate mannger of athletics. has t•eplfed that the only chnn<'e of such a . game. lies In the practice l'rulse of the midshipmen going In that direction next summer. 11' ttiat Is the caS€, the game probably will be arranged. Lewisburg (Pa.) Is the ' seat ot Ruckne.ll university, which has a beau· tlful concrete bowl commemorating the memory ot Christy Mathewson, one ot Bucknell's most famous men, but oddly enou):!h there Is no memorial of any kind In tMe Pennsylvania coni regions to Hughy .Jennings, who came out of Pittstnn to hecnme one of the great leaders of baseball. A stadium project laun<'hed by dvir orgnnlzatlons In Scranton !IS a trib:Jte to H nghy's memory fell flat. Baseball offers a reminder each year that honest ·s port Is a help ln preventIng a public from taking the world too seriously. rt ~~:ives opportunity for enthusiosm without resentments and stands invariably for the spirit of fair play. l Albie Booth, suptwmore ot Yale uni · \'ersity, now the outstanding athlete at Yale. Resides being chosen leader of the football team in his freshman year, Booth wus ulso le~tder of the yearling basellnll and hasl;et ball Rquads. On Lhe footb:Jil field this yeur, he !51 r•roviug h1mselt to be ODt" ot the best quu rterbacks ever to up· pear in the blue nwlesldns. Night Life Gets You if You Don'tWatch Out! War Vet almost takes count, but pals help. would you like it if every H ow two weeks you had to give up your good night's sleep, and work all night instead? This is what happened to W. H. Huggins of 90 Savannah Street, Rochester, New York. When he came back from the War, he took a night "shift" job. ~'It certainly shot me all to pieces," said Mr. Huggins. "I was licked before I started. My pals noticed that the night shift got rne, so during a 'lunch' period in the middle of one night one of them said to me, 'Hug, I bet I know what's the matter with you. This irregular life gets us all unless we watch out. Why don't you try Nujol? Most of the boys are onto this little health trick. Try it!' This kind of maft wins no matter where you put him Nujoi. It absorbs the poisons in your system (we all have them) and' " cleans them out regularly. It cannot hurt you no matter hovr long you take it, and it forms no habit. Nujol contains no medicines or drugs. It is simply the world's most famous method of bodily lubrication. You can get a bottle at any good drug store, in a sealed package, for less than the cost of a couple of good cigars. Begin today to ·prove to yourself how Nujol can help yolf to lick the toughest job and feel bullyl ~'Well, that very night on the wa.y home I got a bottle and within a week I felt like a different person. I wouldn't know myself. You can lick any job, even a night one, if you get the poisons out of your system regularly, Nujol sure did it for me!" That's the - - -- - great thing about Not Oul;v in the Auto The Real Question "Does your wife drive fl·om the back seat?" "" "Of course," said Mr. Chuggins. ·•and Prospective Saitor~Thut's very fnlr, str: And what were you thlnklng oi from the library chair nnd n'~ the allowing her husband?-London Opin dinner pluce and every other kind of seat there is." Ion. Father-') shntl allow my daughter a hundred a year when she marries. • • .ren J Cry for it ' • Children liate to take medicine as a rule, but every child loves the Whlle the amount of revenue from foothal: at Yale Is not :nentioned In the nnnual report issued recently by George Parmlyday, treasurer of the nthletic association, the Indications 11re that the figure went over the mlllion mark again. Tn two previous years the gross rev· emtes ln sports exceeded a million dol1m·s. For the year en(!ing June 80, 1!)28. the gross sports figure was $1,11!'l.2SO, out of which wr~s paid $385,· 100 to vi!dting teams, which left gross net revenues from sports of $734,170. This compares with n gross net of !57fi3.2~0.75 in the Hl2!'l report after poym_e nts to visiting teams. taste of Castoria. ·And this pure !Vegetable preparation is just as good as it tastes; just as bland and harmless as the recipe reads. I(The wrapper tells you just what Castoria contains.) When Baby's cry warns of colic, a few drops of Castoria has him soothed, asleep again in a jiffy. Nothing is more valuable in diarrhea. When coated tongue or bad breath tell of constipation, invoke its gentle aid to cleanse and regulate a child's bowels. In colds or children's diseases, use it to keep the system from clogging. Your doctor will tell you Castoria Coaching rivalry passed the boiling point rerently at the UnlverJSity, of Cincinnati. An Improvement tn the Cinciuna ti backfield was attributed by the tmiversity publication to a new assistant ha<'kfleld coach. The head backfield conch, resenting the f'ralse of his subordlnute. assm1lted the edl· tor of the paper, who swore out n warrant for his arrest. President Snl.rler of the university, arbitrated, however, and the . young journalist withdrew his rharges. Labor Problem Visitor-Why do you toke these magazines~ 'rhere's nothing In them but serlul <;tories. Housewife- Well, the servants ge1 Interested In them and stay on just to see bow the stories end.-Montreut Star. deserves a place in the fawily medicine cabinet 1mtil your· child is grown. He knows it is safe for the tiniest baby; effective for a boy in his teens. With this special children's remedy handy, you need never risk giving a boy or ~ girl medicine meant for grown-ups. Castoria is sold in every drug store; the genuine always bears Chas. H. Fletcher's signature. Be Kind to Flivvers Lady- I'm afraid there's rather a • lot of luggage this year, because we're going to quite a remote place, taking ""' a bungalow. Taximan-No, lady, not on my cah you don't take no bungalow.-London Humorist. Dr. John L. Lavan, form,er National and American league shortstop, and tater manager of the Kansas City Blues, In the Ameri~~n association, has gone in for aviation. He has. been appointed assistant flight surgeon in St. Louis, Mo. Father Lumpkin, the big fullback who dropped out and lessened this year's chances of Georgia Tech, Is playing for the Portsmouth (Ohio) professional team this tall. Jack Ryan, assistant to D!ek Han· ley nt Northwestern, is not numbered among the coaches who wish to swing foothull closer to an exact science by cutting down the penalty that may follow in the wake of a fumble. The New York Evening Post quotes leading football coaches of the eountry as opp_osing suggestloris that the captain of an eleven be given respon· sibility for the direction of his teatn during a gnme and that the coach take a seat In the stllnds. The recer•t Carnegie report on college attletks remarlted thnt "a college football or baseball player has opportunity to ex· hibit little more Initiative than a chessman." and In other quarters f-oot· ball has hPen referred to as a "coach. ridden" sport. ! HAbout five months ago, following an operation for appendicitis I did not gain strength enough to be up and about. My mother and sister advised me to take Lydia E. Pintham's Vegetable Com· pound. I have taken five bottles and it has helped me to get strong so I can do my own housework now. I have recom· mended it to several friends who have been weak and run- AL MARSTERS IS OUT OF FOOTBALL Thursday, November 14, 1929 no~er Wethered, former amatem· e golf chnmpion of Eilnglond led a team representing the Jolters in a match of singles and fonrsomes against Ox· ford unh·ersity plnyers at Southfield, near Oxford. recently, and his side won by 11 to 3. Gus Sonnenberg, .,.·restling ('hampion. claln1s that his shoulders have never heen pinned to a mat. his only defeat heing the result of a di,'e out ot the ring. his head col'hling wltb It cement floor. Needless , . Pain! The man who wouldn't drive his motorcar halfamilewhenit's out of order, will often drive his brain all day with a head that's throbbing. Such punishment isn't very good for one's nerves! It's unwise, and It's unn~cessary. A tablet or two of Bayer Aspirin will relieve a headache every time. So, remember this accepted antidote for pain, and spare yourself a lot of needless suffering. Read the proven directions and you'll discover many valuable uses for these tablets, For headaches; to check colds. To ease a sore throat and reduce the infection. For relie\wg neuralgic, newitic, rheumatic pain, People used to wonder if Bayer Aspirin was harmful. The doctors answered that question year . ago. It is not. Some folks still wonder if it really does relieve pain. That's settled! For millions of men and women have found it does. To cure the cause of any pain you must consult your doctor; but ~u may always turn to Bayer Aspirin for immediate relief. BJflYER ll.SPIRil\1 .Aai,d® ia the. tnde mark of Bayer Muu1actuN of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid • |