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Show THE lUIDV.ALE JOURNAl.., Thursday, June 12, 1930 At home or away Feen-a-mlnt Ia the Ideal summertime laxative. PleasADt and eon..-eJdent. Gentle but thorough In Its ac:tlon. Cheek summer upsets with Feen-allllnt at home or away. .. • • FLORESTON SHAMPOO- Ideal for ,_, in connection with Parker' a Hair Ballalll. Make~ the hair eoft and tluffy, 60 eente b7 mail or at druir· aiate. Hieoox Cbemici.IWOI'ki,Pateboeue.N . Y. MosquitoBites HANFORD"S Balsam of Myrrh bottle If DOtlldted. lfODOJ' . . . . fM - .All--.. Corn Borer The corn borer is one of the most .serious pests of the farm. It enters the cornstalk at tl!e ground and operates throu;;h the length of the stalk and ultimately the corn is de' stroyed. A. nusRell Marston, entomologist at the l\Iichlgan State college corn borer experiment station, llas developed a strain of corn which the borer refuses to attuclc. Wh 0 , Marston cannot tell. There is something !n !t the borer does not like; he knows the grain intulth·e~:Y. and lets It alone. The resistant strain that has been developed Is a cross between the maize abargo, a South American struln the borer will not attack, and a commercially productive North American strain. l'fLGOOD? M011t &II menta atart from poorellmlnation (constipation or leml-conatf. pntion). lnteatinal polsona oap vltaJ. it7. undermine 70nt' health and make life miserable, Tonilrht try toRMATURE'S REMKDT-all-ve~retable corrective-not an ordlnar7 laxative, See how ~ will aid in restoring 70nr appetite and rid you of that beav7. logllY. pe;>less feeling. Jllild, aafe, parclr •oaetable- at dn,.rhb, a)J Z5c __.. FEEL LIKE A JlflLLION, TAKE Deserved Her Pupa Kenneth III.' Lee of Augusta, Mninl>, ('llpturPil a pair of fox pups and just as he tucked them in a basket the mot!Jer fox appeared. With her fur ruffled up, and snarling, she approached within tht·ee feet of him. He took the foxes away, traveling nearly a dozen miles, more than half the joumey being In a canoe. Upon arrh·al at the camp where he was staying he built a pen for the foxes and left them there at night. In the morning be found the mother fox had dug a hole !rom the outside to the pen and bad taken her pups away. Turtle Had Traveled Twenty-eight years ago Edward Smith of ll:~qnette Lake, N. Y., put his name, address and date on a small brass plate and fastened it on a turtle and turned 1t loose. Recently this turtle was found at Tsatasawassa lake. nearly 200 miles !rom Haquette Lake. No Credit ExtenJed Beggar-Spare me a copper, s!r. Business 1\Ian-1 can't spare the time now--cail again tomorrow. "A WONDERFUL HELP TO ME" Read What Mrs. Arnold Says f\bout Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound INJURIES FOLLOW CLOSELY ON CUBS The history of the Cubs In recent years is one of injm·ies, misfortune and blasted hopes. Here are a few of the outstanulng setbacks : 1924--Clw.rley Hollocher, rated with the best shortstops In the majors, retired from game because of lll health . W:!&-Ilal Carlson, purchased from the Phillies tlu~ previous June, suffered an attack of flu during the training trip and was 11ble to pitch only In the last few weeks of the regular season. 1D2!}-Gubby Burtnett, the lengue's outstanding catcher, injured his throw· ing arm while in the training camp and was useless for the ~>eason, except for a start in one gnme and occasion· al appearances as a pinch hitter. Carlson suJrered another utt11ck which preYenteu his getting into pitching condi· tion until the second half of the sea· son, Charley Grimm suffered a broken wrist when he bumped against the grandstand in a game at New York in August. He was absent while the Cubs were making their pennant drive. 1930-llogers Hornsby was sent home from training camp because of soreness in his right heel on which an operation for remo,•al of u growth wus performed last winter. He has been in and out of the lineup since the start of the race. Guy Bush Injured his right eluow when be fell fielding a bail and was out for three weeks. lllggs Stephenson was forced to the bench by a shoulder Injury, caused by attempting a diving catch. Lester Bell. purchased from the Braves to fill the third base vacancy, has been unable to play regularly because of a sore arm develotled in training. Hal Carlson died suddenly, presumably as the result of hemorrhages or the stomach. Ilot·nsby broke his left ankle sllding 1nto third bu.se. Sicldy Royal Family Kle!n (lett) of the Philadelpnla Nationals who led the National league in home runs In 1029--43; and O'Doul, also of the same team, who finished first in the 1V29 National league standing with a batting average of .400. All Round Athlete 1\Iunager Carl Zamloch pulled a manuge1·ial strol:e which gave his Oakland team new life In the Pacific Coast league's l!l:JO campaign recently when he t1;ok young Don Hurst off relief duty and sent him in to begin a game. r>on won his llrst start, going the route and allowing but four hits, then came bac·k anu allowed only 1he a:--uinst Los Angeles in his second full contest. Before then. Pete Daglla had been shouldering the burden of the pitching staff, and carrying the team along. With Hurst's aid, Bi;; Pete,· the Napa man-mountain, pitchl'd the Oaks back into a contending po~ition after they had been rudely dumped from first place. Frank 'Ylsner of Laurel, Mass., who has been re·elected captain of track at the Unl versity of VIrginia, has been big!> point man iu all but two of the meets In which the Cavaliers have ~ompP.<ted during the outdoor season. Though he has been suf'l:erlng with a badly sprained back, Wls~ter has been able to win the 100 and 220-yard dashes and the broad jump with great regularity this season. Ph!ladelphla promoters plan to construct a sports arena covering a block of ground and costing four mllllon dollars. It will ha \'e a seating capacity of 20,000 and will Include a 15· story apartment and office building. Clint Brown, Cleveland rookie pitch· er who is going great guns, is cred· ited with hu ving the best slow ball seen in the majors since Willie Silerdel was in his prime. He started In the ~ame ·:rlth the fastest kind of ball In Harrisburg. Six games for Harvard's 1032 football team already are scheduled. The Crimson will play Pennsylvania State college, October 15; Dartmouth, October 22; Brown, October 20; West Point, Nov em hPJ' 5; Holy Cross, No· vember 12, all at Cambridge, and Yale at New Haven, No\ember 19, The present outfield of the Dett·oit Tigers is snid to be the fastest In the club's history. 'l'y Cobb was a super· speedman but he stood alone. Th!s years' trio of Funk, Johnson and lllce is fal!lter than any other three men who worked side by side. S~ort Notes Eleven letter wen return !or !"otball at Penn State next season. • • • Washington's three Sams have had much to do with the winning stre~tk Jones, Rice and West. • • • Harry Kr!luse and Ping Bod!P., old· time major leaguers, are pla;}·ing in the • California State league. • • • Outfielder Jimmy Welsh was forced to drop out of the Boston Braves' lineup because of a \\'r.euched knee. • • • Johnny Layton, world's three-cush· ion billiard champion, may make an exhihltion tour of Japan 1n iuly and August. He has received an invitation to make the tour with K!m·ey 1\Iatsuyma, J upanese cue ace, and if the terms are satisfactory, he plans to accept. Tommy Duly, who trains the Toronto bascbnll and hockey teams, has a passion for words of three and four syl· Iables. Tommy ruemol'izes them, but never troubles about the definitions. He goes strictly by sound. Two players were discussing a new invention the other day. "All you got to do is start it, and it just keeps on going. It'll go by itself forever unless you stop It,'' said one. Tommy, standing nearby, inter· rupted: "Ah, you mean professional motion." Old Turkey Lining Up ·-. . With Modern Nations Engravers street, a short passage near the grand bazarR, Constantinople, has suffered a change In the past year. Seal makers, who formerly cut signets In the old characters, now are reduced to such inartistic pursuits as painting signs reading ''Keep the Hnlls Clean" and "This way to the Janitor." This is entirely due to the Influence of compulsory education. Thousands of illiterate people who formerly depended upon a stamp with which to place their names on documents now sign tor themselves. Not many years ago the signet was something to be proud of. Frequently it was cut from semi· precious stones and even emerald seals were m>ed. But the signet has now been replaced by the fountain JlCn. Hornsby Is Latest VictimBreaks Ankle Sliding. National Chairman Fred L. Steers of the Amateur Athletic union women's committee, which will have super· vision over the women's track and tl.eld championships at Dallas July 4, says: ''A girl may enter two track events and one field event, or she may enter two field events and one track event, or she may enter three field events. TI1e relay race counts as a track event." W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 24-tii3Q, Noted National League Sluggers Fifty-eight countries of the world are eligible to compete in t11e 1932 Olympic games In Los Angeles, Calif. Bayer Aspirin stops patn quicklt. It clocs it without ang ill effects. Harmle.ss to the heart; hannless to anybody. But it nlways brings relief. Why suffer? BAYE R ll.SPIR IN Goddard Antomatlc 'l'ater VaJ..-e Hold• any pre:-;sun~. works any place. Complete with float. Poultry s!ze 85c, stock $1.35. Queen Anne, who reigned o1·er P.ng- l'r"pa.ld. Go,\dard ?>Ug, Co., El Monte.Callt. Jand from 1702 to liH, gave hirth to Eaaily Pleaaed J7 children. not one of whom surne--r read In this newspaper that " Ivcd her. Only l)ne sun·lvetl infanc·y. there are twenty-seven different way1 'l'his was William. the duke of Glou- ot making coffee! <'Cster, who die•! In 1700 at the age She (!rrltably)-Why do you tell •"' eleven.-I'athfinder l\1ugazine. met that? He--1 should be satisfied if you Illumination coulu learn only one of them l "Do you still keep a ll~ht in the wln•low f1}r your wandering hoy?" Juat a Reminder "\Vhut's the use?" answered FarmFrlend-'l'hanl\s for the $25-but er Corntossel. ".ToRh has took up a via· what Is this pamphlet you gan• me? tion an1l wouldn't pny attention to Anothet·-Oh, that's just a booklet anything less than an airfield beu- that explains how to develop one's con." memory.-Answers. French and Itnlian Vineyarda Oh, Get Out, You t In 1n27 Italy had 10,G81.400 acres "I am always ill the night before !n vineyards and produced 784,20G.OOO a journey.'' gallons of wine. In the same year "Then why don't you go a day e!U'o France had ~.3'>1,6!)5 ncres in g-rapes lier?"-Guitlerrez. und produced 892,410,000 gallons of ,.,.in e. There Are Water-Pipea "I advise you to smoke at work. Wear Goggles It soothes the nerves." open eyes "I could hardly keep my "Sorry, I'm a dlver."-Faun. It breal\fast." "Why do you bother It' you can't love your enemies, at with grapefruit 7" least avoid them. If most of your fears were unNothing amuses a baby that founded most of the new ones will doesn't annoy grown folks. continue to be so. s • • • John W. McElroy, lllver Forest, lll., was elected captain of the University of Illinois tennis team tor next seu~;on. • • • Catcher Dennis Cantrell of the Arkansas State Teachers' college team has signed a contract with tbQ St. Louis Cardinals. • • • Bryan Fred Swan of. Wittenberg, :\lo., who bas b .. n acclaimed the best athlete in tbe Naval academy by tb4 i'<aval Academy Athletic association. The annual award was made by Capt. He;1ry D. Cooke, director of athletics. Although Swan Is shown in grid cos· tume, he also stars at boxing and lacrosse. Europe Has Developed Another Billiardist Europe has developed another bil· Iiarrlist who has a rating close to that of Edouard Horemans, Roger Conti, Felix Grange, Edmond Derbier and other noted cue stars from abroad. This latest headliner Is l\Iarcel Leem· put of Belgium, a southpaw. Van Leempnt, when only nineteen, made an American tour with Hore· mans, a fellow countryman, about three years ago. At that time Hore· mans rated him the most promising billiard player in Europe. Just be· fore leaving for Belgium he remarked: "I am coming back to America anti when I do It will be to win the world's 18.2 balkline championship." And that was only three years ago. Since then Leemput progressed to such a point that he felt he had a chance to wrest the Belgian title from Horemans, a former world's champion, and challenged Horemans. But thus tar IIoremans has not accepted. London Exchange Fund for English Derby Cut The 1\IInneapol!s club wlll erect a new park to be ready for the opeulng of the 1031 season. It will cost S/U)(),· 000 and seat 15,000. • • • The new owner of the Portland club In the New England league is Dick Rudolph, one of the Braves pitchers in the wonder team of 1014. • • • Ray O'Brien, an outfielder, who has been out all season with an inftoeted foot, has returned to the lineup of .Den· ver of the Western league. . . .. Carmen Hl11, veteran right-handed pitcher, bas been sent to the 1\Ilnnenpolis club ot the American associa· tion by the St. Louis Cardinals. • • • Capt. "Buff'' Donnelli, noted kicker at Duquesne university, Pittsburgh, Pa., wore a football shoe on the left foot and a soccer shoe on the right. • • • • Pitl'her Johnny Cooney ot the Boston Braves, suspended for failure to sign within ten days after the start of the season, r,as been reinstated by Commissioner Landis. • • • The Chicago Americans have acquired an 011tion to purchase Short· stop Gregory 1\Iulleavy from the Toledo l\lud Hens on or before .August 1 or the current season. . .. . The standard marathon distance t. 26 miles, 385 yards, but a check of the Marathon-to-Athens route, the basis for this classlc race, has proved to be a trifie less than 25 miles. • • • Kenesaw M. Landis, commissioner of. The extent to which the public par· tlcipated in the English Derby Stock ' baseball, has granted the application Exchange Members• Mutual Subscrlp· of Chester Nichols for reinstatement. tlon Fund of London last year Is Nichols Is the property of the Philshown by the official announcement adelphia NatioBal league club. that this year the amount shows a de· crease from a record total of £1,000,Best Girl Athlete 000 to £67,000. Last year no ban was placed on the number of tickets pur· chasable by members of the London Stock Exchange. This year each member could obtain only 25 £1 "subscription receipts," thus limiting the fund to a maximum of about £100,· 000. 'l'he chief losers of the limitation are various charitable Institutions, which used to receive a portion of. the 10 per cent allotted to charity. Last year £100,000 was given for this purpose, and in all £250,000 has been distributed. G:ENUIN E Lewis' High-Tes t Lye makes the hardest water soft and clear. Soft water saves soap ••• clothes ••• and hands. Order genuine Lewis' Lye from your grocer ••• and follow the simple directions as do thrifty housewiv es everywhe re. Send for book on how to make washing com• pound and home-made soap at te a bar JAMES D. SWAN, Manager of Friendly Enemies Meet Accidentally in Detroit Manager .Jess Altenburg of the Hamilton team of the new Ontario league dropped into the offi<'e of the Detroit Tigers a few weeks ago to arrange ror the transfer of some young players to his club. Ju~t as Jess was leaving the otnce, in walked Knotty Lee, manager of a rival team, evidently bent on a similar mis><ion. "You're ju~t a few minutes too ltlte, Knotty,'' said Jess. "I've arranged for the purchase of Bob Fothergill and several other stars." "You'll neetl t ht•m,'' retorted Knotty, "If you expect to win any games from my team.'' • Speelalth~s The Pellll8)'1vanla Salt Mfg. Co., Dept. Sir&, 30 North La Sane St., Cblc:ago Cuti( ora lUI:ss Cerda Donovan, smllmg stu· dent at • 'ewcomb college, a part of Tulane university, shows how she takes otT for the 50-yard dash, in which she recently placed fir~t at tbe annual field day exercll'les. In recognition of her achlevem~nts as winner In the broad jump, the hop, skip and jump, and the 30-yaru !lash as well as several other events in which she placed, Mis.s Donovan was awarded the gold medal for the best girl ath· lete In the universlt.r. Preparat ions Cutleura Soap-fragrcntand pure, to cleanse and purify. Cutleura OlntiDent-antiseptic ADd healing, to remove pimples, rashes and irrita· tions which mar the beauty of the skin, and finally Cutleura TaletuU-80 smooth and pure, to impart a pleasing fragrance to the skiD. |