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Show it.. UWFW a ccnort X , ' Ml i.j 'ttv " I -- f M V. ; 1 say some experts, but any decline in the quality owners act wisely as the game becomes truly mr ' I: w196seasoissedtmt first ball of the HEN THE Research finds new I fast way to shrink hemorrhoids I without surgery m - MM M m way to shrink hemorrhoid tissues, stop pain and itching all without, surgery. It's a combination of six modern medications in one complete formula: The Pazo Formuta. NEW, RELIABLE RELIEF. Pazo is the only leading formula with these six MM Mt MM ' I M tm M MM M MM n n to shrink and ingredients soothe hemorrhoid tissues.- Research shows this new combination brings symptomatic relief even lo.long-tim- e pile sufferers. - CLINICALLY TESTED BY MM MM MM MM MM IH pain. and itching promptly, fights infection, promotes healing, and lubricates membranes. AVAILABLE NOW In stainless ointment and suppositories. Ask for."." jS: MJf .' Mil mmmm 1 " the lightlyoweTacefbuHtsedthes players, particularly pitchers. Ted Williams, one of the game's greatest hitters and the last player to post a .400 batting averageTbe" lieves that the inevitable decline in pitching could lead to some further, shattering of the home-ru- n and other hitting records. B big-leag- ue tot-teri- ng. t "TTpu'LL never get ig4eagae--rsbaseba1- t- atively. rapid succession, the baseball map was extended in three directions TJie West Coast attained status with teams in Los Angeles (now4wo) Minneapolis Twins brought in the "trtKXerTtral area. And now, with-- M MM Pazo actually proves to do more than just shrink hemorrhoids. It also PAZ0 same method of forming its two new teams : a draft of castoff or over-ag- e 1 MM DOCTORS: ress," Chandler warns. "To measure accurately the health of the game, you must also consider the plight of the minor leagues. The Southern Association, after 61 consecutive e operation. The Three-- I League, the oldest Glass-- organization in baseball, has collapsed. Others are Where we once had 59 minor leagues operating, we now have 19. "Without these training grounds big-leag- ue M Mt National League proceeded at a major-leagu- earlfperaTio Until five years ago, when the game was played jnainly in the East baseball and Midwest, was something less than national in MM expansion "The this week, baseball also will throw out its chest For the first time Lin its long history, the game will lay ar legitimate claim to its reputation as the national pastime. M Recentresea rcfi reveals' ifastne w 'active Wffl Exuan the-Twer- faces an inescapable bankruptcy of talent. Expansion of the major leagues only compounds the problem, spreading an already thin line Ted says, "but the expansion to 10 teams is bound to help the hitter. It stands toTreason. You'vegot 22 pitchers or so in the majors who wouldn't l)e them exeepHor the additions new teams. Sure, it helped Maris hit 61 homers last year. It had to, and that's not taking anything away talent even thinner' Chandler wonders if the fans will supporflhe game if its high of-pla- me to belittle rt ying 1atinchinjrrof--the-brand-ne- Ml mmaKmmmKmmmmmmimm. m MM .duii-- m Mt H M MM MM M t f MM .MM " mm i 1 1 - MM N f, si i1 9 KONSON - :;VvCe:v :,. ..s iI I I- - uwiu,a MM - " d:st:rti fast... a 'I K;!is (Jay! ' -d- oes-itT ' : Zhere are many, including those to jdose. the. complex baseball struc- rehb'-uor'-Ghe'-oi fatnese'nsiW Albert B. "Happy" Chandler, the ' former commissioner of-baseb- all. NEW Thrifty Size Savss You 45c : overJ9csize . 4J .r I i i i ' i i If XY 1. A' V ball park center - and a veteran pitcher, Harry Craft, manager, and Paul Richards, general manager, will get a new s i':in- - management. AH of this should arid up fn q greater over-a- ll interest in baseball, a bigger incentive for more hero- worshipping youngsters to play the game, andthe promise of continued growth and wider expansion. But , i r IJIltsiiideS 0 t , Houston Colts in Texas, the South- west is included In the The new alignment gives the game. Jan entry in each of the 15 major population centers. Let's not forget, either, that National League baseball returns to our largest concentration the -- New Yorl tu;hhyi I, :::"f: BoMySfeonte' fright jnpauncli Housfdn IiooqbobW I s V - 0- ; Fl INTS fii act . . I tI , -- ZomtIuJVeefcIypriLfI962 -- (Hsjiuinot m ncB more ords of the game are based, should from Roger's talent at all." Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick does not agree with the deteriorate. Already fan interest seems to be slackening. The Associated Press, for example, polled 215 sportswrit-er- s and broadcasters and found that most believed pro football would re- - C. proph- ets of doom. "Getting New York and Houston into the National League was a good move," Frick declares, ind it's gm'ng4(ijie.iiiJnreasfeftt. tendance and interest throughoi the country in 1962. And we're not Iaieaba11stKe"top spormr exThe fact that major-leagu- e pansion is ruining ground hasn't seemed to bother the cluh owners. They plunged ahead haphazardly, critics say, regardless of losing prestige and damaging the game. Why ? Initially,: it was the threat of a third major league the Continental League that propelled them into actfonr The American League expanded to 10 teams in 1961, makt ing the move almost overnight. The i- th rou "I'm not alarmed that pro football ma-y- tak-e- baseball's place. We did have a slight decrease in at tendance in 1961 but don't forget that -- 30 million watched professional baseball and that the game is being playedinTnore highnools and colV hef0; Altogether. T hero noro narnuAn Aim nM J : lion youngsters playing baseball on organized, uniformed teams." JWSX?1" |