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Show mm pugs The new Pro Doable Duty Tooth Brush never scratches or scrapes bat it's tops in cleaning power! Here at last is a tooth brush that cleans teeth sparkling clean and massages- - gums gently and safely at the same tune. There's not even a slight, imperceptible scratch or scrape in the Pro Double Duty, yet it has the "backbone" to rout stubborn food particles and polish teeth really bright. All nylon, or nylon and natural There's a child's size. Get a Fto Double Duty for everyone in your family. THI INttOI STORY b firm blue bristles that clean teeth better polish brighter! " ? ; " lo v ' TNK OUTSIDE . TOUT- . is gentle white bristles that massage your gums safery, automatically as you brush. n I 1 si pro I"- - I Maker .r i , of regular PRO Tooth BruaHaa, JEWEUTE Hair BruaK ' J ihi? m mm mm ' ' mvsii n aw-- -! m m- -- - n 2v If 1 - and PRO Comba. By ED FITZGERALD l a f hen Larry Sherry was a boy VginLosAngeles,-niobody- : grow-- V thought he would ever overcome the effects of two clubfeet to become a professional athlete. When he was pitching for the Maracaibo . club in Venezuela in the winter of 1958-5- 9, trying to master the slider pitch and imrecord of six prove a dismal minor-leaguvictories and 14 defeats, nobody thought he would ever make it to the majors. And r when the - ds Angeles Dodgers, desperate for some mound help, called him up fronvtheir St Paul farm team in despite an unimpressive 7 record, nobody thought he would turn out to be, hero of the '59 World Series. But though he came out of the blue with a flourish of trumpets and a crashing of drums, Larry Sherry can't be charged with being luckyAny luck he has enjoyed he's made himselfthat's why the Dodgers are betting that he has left oblivion be- e- ,- J - ; - mid-seas- on 6-- , X for the Dodgers before Larry even got there, thinks it's more than a matter of Larry's pitches. "All of a sudden," he says, "Larry just seemed to get confidence. He wasn't afraid of anybody. He'd come out of. a case of that bulTpen burning the" ball past them and sitting down. No doubt about it." "Sherry comes on," one baseball writer says, "like Milton Berle. His conversation is very modest. He's no braggart. But his actions, when he comes in to pitch, are positively flamboyant. He really "takes " . charge out there." liketJusP One of the things the Dodgers like about their newest star is that he's eager for actiohT He" fidgets T all the" time" he's in" the" bull pen waiting for manager Walt Alston's call; he's edgy until he squares oft against the hitter, ready to fire the blazing fast the nifty slider ball he's had all along-an- d Family Weekly, April 10,1960 -- . " 1 arry, began "taking charge" as soon as he whiffed the Los Angeles atmos phere. His seven victories helped enormously as the underdog. Dodgers outfought Milwaukee arid San Francisco for the Na- -; tional League pennant, whipping the . . Bravesrai-- a hindhini-forood- -' 18 he taught himself down in Venezuela. -- after-they-had-fini- play-off-series shed tKerfegular season in tie Larry's relief pitching played a big part in" winning the first play-o- n game," but it" the Chiwas in the World cago White Sox, that the determined youth really took over center stage. As far as the White Sox were concerned, Series,-again- st |