OCR Text |
Show THE MIDVAI& JOURNAL Grow With Each Fight H I A F1'ER heavyweight championship fight since 11121, with of the nlfalr at Shelby, IIJont~ we have been Informed that we ha,·e seen the. lll8t and greatest of socii spectacles. ! "This Is the peak. Tex Rickard never can hope to outde this," men ! said after the gnte receipts Incidental to the crushing of Georges Car· pentler at Jersey City had been announct>d ns more than $1,600,000. % "People may ha,·e been enticed out this time, but never ngaln,• we % heard after Ute t;uge, hairy Firpo had hPPn <lrnggt>d to his cornl!r % at the conclusion of the second ~more-than-a-mil· % lion" spectacle. % After l'hlladelphla It wns the same old story. "This," they told us. "Is the last. People came out *% % here and were stung nnd then half drowned. No % fight will be worth more money than this one." Before and after the Chleugo fight between % Gene 1-'unney and Jack Dempsey, It wns mnlntnined % that the ultinmte .Jn llsctlc spectacles had been attnln!'d. "Tiwre must be n limit, und this Is It," said those wtw knew (or thought they knew) the capnclty of the Amerfc·an t•ullllc fur pecuniary *% Tex Rickard~- punlshmenl n·here pugilism wus cunc:erued. Now the chances art> thut there will he a henvy. weight chaluplonshlp fight· tlurlng the H1·st turtnlghl of September, *%* of this year, somewhere In the vicinity of Nl•W York city, and that it will be witnessed by more spectator~ thun were In Snltllers' Meld % lust yeur, and t>nrlehlng 'l'ex Hlckard, Gene Tunnl'y and another boxer by suma exceeding those gleaned frnm the public at Chicago. % ** exc~epltloh * t * * * * * ! = * i** i* i I ate he believed Miguel Avlla, who obtained tbe papers for Hearst, and John Page, who acted for the publisher, had testified falsely, and lie crltl· clzed Hearst severely. Ni-t-G .,..,to Cuba and iAmlliclm f6riael Bomb N"~CUqU&D~. Br EDWARD W. PICKARD IP•smQ"Jr·OOOL.WC:a: left Wash· lqton l'rldq bJ tram for Key l'la., where lit ll.c!anled the bat· llt•mecl ICI'OIIII to leavlnr the United UJ'II!· ....,.. tt• In bla lncnm· ot the olllce. With llr&. Coolldp and the dls~W ~ comprJslnc the delePtloo to the Panjlrti<UH~ooll'e.. It was to partt..'l. ~Inc of tbat aasemtlit.J ""· Coolldce made the tiD• lili atay on the Island be brtet aamfstakab le algn11 that ~;d~~ of the United States In 9t tbe continent was to be IW the delegations of some L$tlll American natlona, tbls ~tated by resentment ~can Intervention In Nlcf* order that the President Ills dalegatlon mlgbt not he em_, criticism at borne, the co~ttee on foreign relations to postpone Its ln"stlgatlo n NlilV&guaa situation until afretdrll. Such an Inquiry was tor b)' a resolution Introduced ..,.,t.... Wheeler of Montana and ~o1rttr the committee seemed It but de~rred action for the stated. Protests a,alnst our In NlcaraJOa bave been rather the being In the form .'_eal)lefram to President Coolidge editors ot papers In &>gota, In-• or iim•wblle American marines nom1,® were belnc hurried down .....,mfl from both the Atlantic Padk lltatlons and General COIIUBIIIder of the corps, also ou111m-·•-- to look over t11e sitIntention to band led by <lenand give the country pace has not been altered. who are said to be by a former German olllcer MaUer, are active and enterllld have made several atto • • detachment s of maIn llll8 instance, at Somotlllo, 01 atlve troops deserted and helped the rebels In 1111 a patrol llt'mmanded by W. 'Payne of the marines. mbere'd. Payne retreated to IN~tll'l'lt.> ~"'•ilne!d relnfol'l!emt>nts Somotllla, hot was A larger body of \VII I'UIIltld there from Chinanbut the baadlta and deserters to thf,-mOUJitain&. Lieut. F. marine avt•tor, discovered 200 tiandlts lying In ambush a column of marines which ~~~~ from Qullall to Jlearo. " and J:Dachlne gun t11e I!UUillt the band to rout, killing tncl woDDdlnc otllera. Bombs. Mil another marine plane Qallall killed nine rebels, up "COIIIlelltratloo. COI.ONEL LINDBERGH'S successful ftlghts are becoming almost mont>tonollll, and 10me one has said that If be did not land safely somewhere, tl'tat would be news. However, his tour still makes Interesting read· lng and the Latin-Americans do not weary of receiving blm tumultuously and heaping honors upon blm. Monday of lust week the lone eagle dropped down on the flying field at Panama thnt was built and named f!'l' him, af· ter a tour boors• ftght from costa Rica. The huge crowd almost mobbed him, and President Cblarl received him warmly. For two days there were fetes, banqoetlf, reviews and other functions, and Lindbergh took President Chlarl and VIce President Duque up In ·an army observation plane. Thep the flyer bad several days, busy but more' restful, In the Canal Zone. He announced tbat he would fly tt> Venezuela next, alight· lng at the army air field near 1\lara· rli.L where President Gomez lives. Thim he planned to proceed to St. Thomas, one of the Virgin Islands, next to San Juan, Porto Rico, where there Is an excellent army field; thence to Santo Domingo, where there also Is a got>d marine-constructed field; then to Port au Prince, Haiti, which has the best field in the Carib· bean, and then to Hnvana. R EORG.\NIZATIO~ of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad ha\·lng i:leen approved by the inter· state commerce commission, Federal Judge Wilkerson in Chicago Issued t>rders for the recel \"er to transfer the company to the new organization, and at midnight Sunday the old company passed out of existence, Its place being taken by the CIMago, Mlhvaukee, St. raul & Pacific railroad. Henry A. Scandrett of Omaha Is presIdent and H. E. Byram, former president, becomes chairman of the board of directors. The reorganlzatlMl was carried through by· Kuhn, Loeb & Co. During the receivership ,f nearly three years the property has s~ad ily Improved, according to llr. Byram. Yankee Students Plan to Witness Olympic Games • • • • • • • • • • • • Helen Wills Plans Tour of Europe Next Season • • • Children • • • .. • • Zuppke Calls Two-Team Football Plan "Flabby" and,,.,.- Dr8clao • 1J'& ZtnO•P au$ ... pnOBABJ. Y Pope Plus XI will be known In history as the author of the encyclical rejecting movements favoring the unity of the Christian churches regardless of form or creed. It was declared In Rome tt> be the moat Important Vatican document Issued since the World war, and there can be no doubt that Its etl'ect will be great and widespread. It was considered specifically as a rejection of the etrorts of the Anglo-Catholics of the Church of England to bring about an entente with the Cathc.. ic church, but Its terms are general. The pope declares tbe sole religion REPLYIN G to Secretary Kellogg'• was revealed to tbe Catholic church, suggestion of a multilateral wblcb has maintained ltst>lf one nnd treaty renouncing war, the French Identical throughout tbe centuries. govt>rnment prop<'Ses that the han Of religious conferences and con- shall be restricted to "aggres~lve gresses for unity It> which all are In- war.h This Is not agreeable to our vited the encyclical snrs: "Such at- government and In a second note Mr. tempts cannot obtain the approval of Kellogg shows It clings to Its original ('athollcs. These movements nre stand that the treaty's declaration be founded on the f11lse theory presup- against war without any qualifying posing that ah religions ?.. ~ good and or modifying dE>ftnitlon attached, and meritorious ; therefore all, although also that <>thPr world powers be asked • • In a dltl'erel)t way, manifest and slg· to unite In signing lt. The new tum Seemingly the agitation against de nlfy eq11ally that sentiment, lnb<>rn In In the discussion Is not considered by us, to be carried to God for reverent the State department to bar the wa:v stroyirg wild flowers floes no good. to ultimate negotiation of 11 treaty Yale moters pulled the Harvard goa: recognition of ijls domlnlt>n, "Followers ol aueh a theory not between France and America, and ul· posts up by the roots. alone deceive and err, but repudiate tlmately with nil powers; declaring • • • true/ religion, distorting concepts, against war as a weapon in Interna-l Milton Stock, former major leaguer who managed the Mobile team fast tending little by little tt> naturalism tlonal relations. season, has been renamed for that posl· apd atheism, whence clearly those ad· herlng to such theories detach them· THOJIJAS HARDY, dean of English tion for another year. seh·es from the religion revealed by . literature ond the last of the • • • God. Under the appearance of good great VIctorian writers, died WednesBill Hargiss, a former grid star at they more ea!!lly hide deception when day at his homE' near Dorchester at Emporia Teachers' college and Iuter t~y try to promote the unity of all the age t>! eighty-sewn, after a coach there, has been appointed foot· Christians." month's Illness. Of late years the fa- ball coach at the University of Knnmous novelist of Wessex had devoted sas. sECRETA RY OF THE NAV¥ WIL- himself to writing poetry, but wheth· • • • BUR and Admiral Hughes, chief er any of thE>se poems will he put Into 'l'he Baltimore Country dub was of naval operations, appearing before print Is doubtful. awnrded tbe 1928 National Profe• the bl'Use naval all'alrs committee In Among other deaths of the week 1 slonnl Golfers' association tournamE'nt behalf of the new $125,000,000 con- were those of Loui~ F. Post of Wash- 1 to the annual business meeting of the strnctloa program, told the congress- logtt>n, a~thor, editor and adherent I assO<'Iatlon. men flatly that the American lleet Is of George 11 single tax theories ; Marnow Inadequate to the defense of the vln Hughltt of Chicago, pioneer railE'·ery home gume played hy the country. They asserted that the road builder and executive. Sara A building of 72 vessels, Including cruls· Conboy of New York, lab~r leader: . \\'ashburn cullegl! IKunslls) football ers, submarines, destroyer leaders and and Dr.•Julius Grlnker of Chicago, I team, _for 37 years has bet>n witnessed by V. A. Hurshh11rger, professor of aircraft carriers, would fulllll the sea - emln~t neurologist. mathemuth s. defense lll!eda of the United States. • • • Wblle denying that the pr<'gl'am LBEHT D. LASKER, former Barney Dreyfuss suys Cuyler wus can be considered as placing the chairman of the United States , United States In competition with oth· shipping board, and Mrs. Lasker have tl'ltdl'd to the Cubs heeause he is too er nations, Secrt'tary Wilbur admitted given $1,000,000 t<> the University of lt>mperamental. S · rky Adums •~ n course, thnt had that In working out Amerlcan needs Chicago for medical research direct· good lnllt!lder but, rwthlng to do with lt. the alze of other navies was taken ed toward e~<tabllshlng the nature,, • • Into consideration. He said the pro- causes, prevention and cure of deg&u· • &ram would put the United States eratlve dl«eases. In other words, the Kid Dorbert, who Is rememherPd by well within the 5-5-3 ratio as far as aim Is to Increase the ttfe expectnlll'f u!d·tlmers for his battle wltl1 l'ats,y Brltala Is concerned and slightly of men and womt>n who hll\'e rea,~hed . .K•!ne, In which he wus kno~ked down middle age. above the ratio with Japan. :~~ time~ in eight rountls. ret•enlly pi'<~ 1 moted u benefit boling prngru m In Admiral Hughes said the completloo of the procra,m wool d gl ve the EATH In the electrlt• chair tn 1 Baltimore. coantrJ "reuouable secnrlty,h but Sing Sing brought to a close the I would not give the United States com- tragedy of Ruth Snydet and l'J<•nry / Curl Williams. who g-uided the mand of the sea. Judd Gray, murderel'll of the woman'• 1 Wichita Fulls Spudders of the Texu>' husband. Resourceful lawyer• tr!e:l . le~gue to tbelr first pennalll nnd lhe URPRISINGLY, the Democratic ap to the last minute to prevent or 1 l>1xle title lu~l season, has sigrwd a national committee In eealon tn delay the execution, but all thel~ ef· j one-,rear contr•I~I lo cootirJUe u Uw Waablngton selected HOUBtoo, Texaa, forb! were futile. · 1 Spnt!de• uwnu~:er. -~ ~~ Coughs and Colds • • • Boschee's Syrup Cub Slugger • • • Use Many Languages • • • • • • • l •g, * • • • I II not. a ldntnla of evlUl Ulllted tlatea- senator liteDtef. or was p~lied, or wu dtreetly or ln4lreetly, any «' other valqble by any repl'eleata tln or tbe cov· of M:exleo. pretended docu.ment lbcnr· 11,215,000 wa wttltdrawu Mexican treasury and 1e11t consul ,eneral In New be paid to United States sennot geoaloe, but Is spurious and, In so far as It to be alcned by the PresiJ.M:e:dt!O or tbe aecretnry of the of Me:dct>, It IIJ forged. laid It bad not yet to deterrilloe tbe Identity of ~'tlll,ctliJier of tile spurious doctald the sen- I * I for the national convention and set the opening date for June 26. The contest was between Houston and San Francisco 'and the tlttb and deciding ballot was 54 to 48 In favor of the Texas city. Houston oll'ered $200,· 000 for the convention and promised to hulld a new hall If the city aodl· torlum, which seats :1,000, were con· sldered too small. The place has , hotel accommodations for 10.000 to 12,000 persons. The Jackson day banquet was attended by most of the party leaders and harm11ny prevailed, nt least on the 'urfuce. Gov. AI Smith of New York was not present, but a letter from him was read and evoked long and loud applause. To observers In Washington It begins to look as If Smith might get the Democratic nomInation almost without a contest. On the Republican side It was announced that Frank 0. Lowden would enter the North Dakota Presidential primaries to be held 1\Iarch 20, the first to be held In the 1\flddle West. In the •;ast the Hoover boom was growing steadily and his cause was hl'lped by the fact that Tht>mas A. Edison and Henry Ford both declared for him. SE'nator Jim \Vatson of Indiana said he had not yet decided whethPr to be a cuntPnder, but that it he enter·ed the race it would be In earnest and not as a stalking horse. Lanky Bob Given Credit for Punching Ability by Fistic Authorities. Bob Fllzslmmons, according to quite ' a number of flstlc authorities, t·nrrled the hardt>st punch of any heavyweight champft>n. Jack Dempsey's punching ability t was always regarded as Inferior to , that of Fitzsimmons. If you care to base your arguments on the resperth·e records of Demp~ey I and Fitzsimmons, then Dempsey must be considt>red the better slugger, 1 writes "II. G. Salinger, In the Dettolt News. Dempsey hils enguged In eight ft;::nts where the heavyweight title was ln\'Oived. He has scored a total of 22 kn<>ekdowns. Dempsey knorked down Willard seven times In the fir~ round of their fight In Toledo. He knocked down • llllly llllske twice In the third round No mother In this enlightened age of their tight at Benton Harbor. He ***********••••••**••····~**********•••••********* knocked down Rill Brennan once. In would give her baby something sbe the twelfth round, at New York city. did not know was perfectly harmless, He drt>pped Georges Carpentier twlre especially when a few drops of plain In the fourth round at Bo~·fe's Thirty Castorla will right a baby's stomach Arrl's. He scored seven knockdowns and end almast any little 111. FretfulThe Ol~·mpll· gaml's at Amsterdam over Luis Firpo In the first round nod ness and fever, too; It seems no time until everything Is serene. There 11re 2M colt c! uh~ In and in 1928 will be one or the obje!'tlves of two In the second at New York city. That's the beauty of Castorla; ltll around Glasgow, Stotlund. London u group of students from unlverslllet~ He floored Tunney once, In the sev gentle influence seems just what Is <'f the Western <'onference, who wlll enth r·ound. at Chicago. has 250 cl ulia. nt'eded. It does all that castor oll make a tour of ~;urope this year, con· In t>nly two of his fights did Dempmlgbt accomplish, without shock to ducted hy Maj ..John L. Griffith. cnm- sey fail to scm·e a knockdown He The Chinese, sald to be the greates1 .could not drop Tommy Glbbo~s mis!!loner In of t~e Big system. Ten athletics ,Without the evil taste. and gamblers In the worl\1, ure to ha\"1! n !'tllss .Marla Leonard, dean of women their 15-round bout at Shelby, Mont., ~ Its delicious· n:ing purely vegetaswing rt1 dog ruclng. nnd he fulled to topple Tunney In able, • you can gl\·e It as often as at the University of Illinois. their first meeting at Philadelphi a t~ere 8 8 sign of colic; constipatio n; Plans for the trip have been com· Assorlutlon football has de,·eloped diarrhea; or need to aid sound, natplet!'d by a grt>up of representati ve last year. nto the most popular sport in Austria Fitzslmmons fought only three ural sleE>p. students from Big Ten schools. since the World war. Just ?ne warning: It is genuine The members of the party will sail fights as hpavywefght champiM! and he scored but one knockdown. James Fletcher s Castorla that physicians from New York .July 7 on the S. S Human nature Is what makes hun- R,vndnm. The trip Includes visits tn J. Corbett was the onf:v man Fltzshn- recommend. Other preparation s may dreds attend a debate and ten thou London and the Shakespear e county mons lloored In hen,:ywelght cham- be just as freE> from all doubtful drugs, plonshlp competition. sands a football game. but no child o! this writer's Is going In England, to The Hague, Schenln The statistics, therefore, lean far to test them! Besides, the book on • gen, Amsterdam and Marken In Hoi. care nod feeding of bubies that comes Suzanne Lengfen emphatically de laud and to Ostend, Brussels nod Wa· toward Dempsey. with Fletcher's Custorla Is worth its >~les all current rt>ports that she Is to terlo<' In Belgium. The students will weight In gold. marry her manager I!OOD. occupy seats In the grand stand at the Olympic games July 28. Alth mgh be has but one leg, Bill From the games al Amsterdam the Helen Wills, American and Brlrlsh .'ltewart played football last year wilh pnrty will go to Cologne and by steam er, on the Rhine to \\'eisbn!len. There tennis champion, will tour Europe u Charlotte (N. C.) team. thE':V will dh·lde in three sections fOI tills year as a member of a two-worn· different parts • of Europe, meeting an tE'am officially represt>ntlng the Charles W. Bachman recently re ugnin In Pnrls, a week before salff.lg United States Lawn Tennis assodarlgned as footbHII and trat·k coach at tl<'n. for the United States. Kan~as State Agrfcult\lruf school. This bec11me known when IIJiss ~ Wills telegraphE'!I acceptance of the A touch of set-back now and then Invitation extended by the national Is rl'llshed by the l~t of men-but tennis body. not by the ,·arsily fodtllnll ele\'en. Matches will be played with the Quick, safe, sure relief from • The twn-tenm footlJull argument leading woman racqueters of Fran<'e, painful callouses on the feet. Mexll'un tennis ollll-fllls believe the) 81111 ruges in the \Vesll'l'n confprence, England, Germany and Belgium. A& all d..., hnve a coming world's champion In and the more Coach Zuppke <•f Illinois The other member of the team has : thirteen-year-old Senorita llaria Tapia talks nhnut It, the more crltkal be not been selected, but It Is under- ' -~ Putoncon-do e becomes. He told the Aurora alumni stood that Penl'!npe Anderson of Rich· J>aiaiomood, of \'n Illinois .. and thnl Mrs. !t Charlotte wns a "fluhhy H<'llld~n." Sunday fishing Is favored by the Phllndelphfa (Pa.) chapter of the lo- because lllE'n don'l play fonthnll for m!'r Chapin of Springfield, Mass., are ITR~ W \~TF.J} being ron~idered. Badger. Skunk. Ci\'eta and Rabbit Hldet cal lzuak Wtilton l.ea~ue of Amerl!-a. exercise hut for "the di'Rmn and h!'rO our apecialtles. our dealer.t~' ~P.cla.l ftnt Miss Wills plans to leave eltbei In a\·erag~ price litttGH))('!or~ ism <'f lt." you sell. FRED LA \\'SO~. STOC'KTO:>il, KA~SAS. Adding a second foottlall team to April or early In May. Only 14 home runs were made at ---The Berkeley miss has oetlnltely dethe Cincinnati ball lteld last season. the university athletic program Is ~ cided not to play In the French chamless than In any other major league mere drop in the burket where there pionships, .June 21, as the date Is too are not only annuytng, but dangerous. are 7.000 mule students, Zuppke <·on park. It not attenjed to at once they may tinol'd, and there will a! ways be one close to the Wlmbbdoo tourney. j develop into serious ailment. ''best" team an~-w~y. Wily Is It that there are never an.~ "America wants to see only ~he pieces In the paper aboul how hurd best," Zuppke said. "When people the varsity band bas been bit by is soothing and healing In such cases. begin to worship mediocre or Poly and has been used for sixty-one years. graduation ? 30c and 90c bottles. Buy It at your drug second heat, then the oatlon Is store. G. G. Green, Inc., Woodbuey, doomed." 'I T In eleven yeat·s of coacnlng at Notre Dame,· Knute Rockne'9 tt>ams hnvP London to Be Floodpro of won eighty-nine games, lost nine anfl London's greal "anti·llond" scheme tied live. is nearing completion nfler nearly Thirteen tunguuges we1·e used to tell sewn years' work. P:~rts of it hare the story of the Xotre Dame-Southern An arenn especially adapted to lee been finished, nod are credited with California foothall spe<·tarfe In many hockey Is to he built at Dartmouth having su,·ed the city from 11 possible purls nf the world. In addition to college, In Hanover, N. H.. at a cost deluge dut·ing the llig storms of la~t l•;ngllsh (or Ameriran, ns It Is known ~f $100,000. sunnuer. Tile ~ehi'IIIC iud n<les sturm In l'hirngn). nrcnunts of the contt>st relief se\wrs, with pumping stations were told In Spnni~h. Polish, Ger· About the bfgge.-.t football upsel ol man, l!un~:nrinn. fittc<l with powerful machinery at danFrench, Slov('ninn, the yenr was any tune the Minnesotn Grt>ek, ltnlinn, gpr points. \\'hen it i~ romplNed, exl:u!nnninn, Yf<ldfsh, line flxt>d up a hole through tackle for Croatian. l'rnnrlinnrin perts suy, Lnnflon ll'ill be practically n nod l\'orwe· Mr. Almquist. II ood p mo f.. glun newspnpers. * the famous High bridge over the Harlem river In New York. 2-Deslgo selected for tile future home Nat10111, to stand oh the shore of Lake Geneva, Switzerland. 3-WIIIIam Ill, Butler, chairman of II&Uoall committee, and bls aida meetlnc Ia Kansas City to arrange for the national convention. HAD ijARDEST PUNCH Marquette Cage Star I !Coach Wilce Continues 1 __ ____ ->=-*x..:..:-.-...:..:..x ..:..:..:+x..:..~+:~ t $ Good Hockey Combine t :~ Youth and Age Make • S Mr!:'. f'rintz-So your husband has been dl'('('iring )·ou, I'll? I I •• The Gay Deceiver Fight on Varsity Evils ••• • When You Feel a Cold Coming On. Take Laxative BROMO QeiNINE Tablets to work orr the and to fortify the system against Cold an attack of Grip or Infiucnta, 30c.-Adv. Mt·s. Sharpe-Yes : the wretch. I're oeen gh"ing him ~u rents for his bus fnre every day, und I just found out Dr. Jphn Wlfce of Ohio State will he's lleen wnlking to the oflke and continue Pn hls big job at Ohio State ' spending the money. and in the Western conference, chief· ly In the fi!le of divorcing fraternity When It comPs to mistakes the soppolitics from athletics. Already he ply alwa~·s PX<'eE'ds the demnnd. has accomp'ished, or had accompllshE'd. one constructive piece of leg· lslntlon to this end-the naming of a I captain for t>very game Instead of electing a season leader. It seE>ms al· together likely that other Western conference ele\·ens . will adopt this seemingly necessary measure. As an lnlluence and as a coach who ran make as much t>UI of good material as any other coach, Doctor Wllre Is needE'd In his present Held of en tleavor. .. A D 1 ltiggs StE'phenson, shown in tile photo, had a great year with the Chi· cago Cubs. Besides playing a clean · game In the outfield he had a batting i I average of .340, fourth among ~atlonal i I league batsmt>n. · i).; f The phulu shows Floyd Huzner ol :;to?H'IIS Point, Wis.. a forwurd. who >lS <'Uflluln of the Marquette univer· sit~· buskt>l hull tenm of Milwaukee. will lead Coach Fr11nk J. Murray's hi ue and gold quintet Into action .tgulnst such aggrt>gatlons as North· 1restern. Iowa. IIJinnesota, Oregon Ag· J:fcs, ~lkhlgan Aggles, Creighton and :'\otre Dn me. ~ S• The Chicago Blackhawks of -~ the Nationul Hockey league have the youngest and the c!dest goul tenders In major le,gue hockey. "Chuck" Gardiner, ' I rwenly-three, Is the regular ~oalie, nod Hugb Lehman, forty· one, reguf11r lal!t year, Is acting as team coach this season. Gar· diner has been doing so well Lehman has I)Ol been placed oJ• the ice. 666<+:..)(~~..:.4+:..:..:..:..:c Winter's Colds and Chills Throw Heavy Burden• on the Kidneys. extra burdens on our COLDS kidneys. When the kidneys olow put up, impurities remain in the blood and ano apt to make one tired and achy with headaches, dizzine. and often naqing backache. A common wam~isecantyorbumingoecretionl. Doan a Pilla, astimulant diuretic, increue the eecretion of the kidneya and aid in the elimination of waate impurities. Are endoned b7. ueera everywhere. A~ JfOU' neighbor/ DOAN'S PI~~s ASTIMULANT DIURETIC .-:a. KIDNEYS filllor·HHburn Co. Mig C1leto. Buffalo. NY. W. N. U., Salt lake City, No. 3-182& |