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Show i Frank. Howard' ! PERIODIC nun U A Anne down but Midol brought quick comfort Midol acts '' Dodgers mm i r Mensruai pain naa bring faster i Hi .11 three ways to relief from menstrual .StstressJt relieves cramps, eases headache and chases "blues." timetfr if" When it' H i I i ' . 5 Bsc!i Was lillliig .13" i t. Maw, Mart vwttt H 7l1 ftsitivt toi Itlkf Kidacy Drag DirKt-Actl- t Backache pain-a- re ciated with faulty kidney function. ? i f stabbing often asso DeWittV Pills now have a combination of drugs with direct diuretic action to help keep kidneys clean of acid wastes that so often cause back pains, mild bladder irritation, getting up nights, loss of energyeven muscular pains. These drugs, in a new formula, give more positive relief than ever before! So effective,you even see they're at work--wh"the blue comes through.' With kidney function improved, DeWitt's helps you have more pain-fre- e days, more restful nights. t i H runs-batted-- en KEEP FALSE TEETH A in-i - - in SECRET! v7i unra ' .v scsiars Trouble with loose plates that slip, rock or Plasri-Line-r. cause sore grams ? Try Brimms One application makes plates fit imM&ljuith-eptudtr, paste or aubhmu Brimms Plasti. Liner adheres permanently to your plate: ends the bother of temporary applications. With plates held firmly by Plasti Liner, YOU CAN EAT ANYTHING! Simply la? soft strip ot Plasti Liner oa troublesome upper or lower. Bite and it molds perfectly. lutsy to sue, tasteless, odorless, harmless to you and your plates. Removable as directed. ut -- i I 1 i Mosteyback guarantee. At your drug $2.30. counter. $1.50 reliner for one plate; FW-62 Inc., Dept. two plates. Plasti-Line107S Main Sw Buffalo 9. N.Y. r, BSJBaaaaBBjiggxsBSBSsSf big Frank Howard away from Ohio State University in the spring of 1958 by shoving $108,000 into his pocket, and he reported to their training camp at Vero Beach, Fla., he called everybody "Sir" and "Mister" and said excuser mew every time he bumped into a base runner or a fielder. During his first season as a professional, with Green Bay in the old Three-E- ye League, his manager, Pete Reiser, liked to card to assign Frank to carry the line-u- p home plate before the game because he got a kick out of hearing him greet the opposing manager with: "Good luck tonight, Sir" Two years later, in the "spring of 1960, there was a different Frank Howard at Vero Beach. He looked the same six feet, seven inches and 245 pounds of magnificently proportioned athlete, handsome in a clean-cu- t, rough-hew- n sort of way. He still looked like a baseball Paul Bunyan when he boomed his home-ru- n shots over a scoreboard nobody had ever cleared before. He still called strangers "Sir" when he was inhandshake troduced, and his country-sty- le still left your hand stinging. But he wasn't the same eager, bashful kid. Behind him was a record, in twd seasons as a pro, of 82 home runs and 235 In his scrapbook was a growing mountain of newspaper and magazine clippings calling him "the next Babe Ruthn and "the superstar of tomorrow." It didn't take long for the Dodgers brass to find out that he had been reading them. At first, the problem was just to get him to understand that he wasn't supposed to knock the ball out of the park every time up. "He thinks he's got to hit the ball 600 feet every -- timeDuke Snider said. "It's all wrong, the way they keep making these predictions about the kid. They're going to ' ruin him. "If he would only listen and not be so stubborn," said Reiser, who managed Frank in both his minor-leag- ue seasons and is still with him as a Dodger coach. "He's a 'Bible hitter you know. That means he says to himself, Thou shalt not pass' when he's up there, and he swings at the ball no matter where it is. I know. I used to be a "Bible ' O llSl(i';ll VV. .;.;- - - sj aJ I t , . fl 1 " N LI c , DcJITFS PILLS H the Los Angeles Dodgers in. hitter' myself." It occurred to Reiser, not unreasonably, that: "Maybe the best thing that could happen would be for the pitchers to start get- IS Family Weekly, July 17, 2960 When he can't play, he picks up his bat and goes home to sulk; when he can play, it's a tossup who worries most about what he'll do -e- nemy pitchers or his own coaches |