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Show SPORTS How You May Sleep Away Never Take a Skin Hospital Tested Regulator Helps Relief Come Naturally -- dry wonder-w- Doctors say most constipation your skin occurs when waste loses moisture in the colon. To five relief, laxacramping; can The Shame of Every year Next morning, wash thoroughly with Cuticura medicated soap. You'll be amazed how quickly tives! tives often force action ,f hands and knuckles get so and cracked that nothing seems to help, try this simple treatment. Each night at bed time, massage a dab of Cuti cura Ointment into the skin. New York, N.Y. (Spccial- )Research has discovered a orking substance that helps correct constipation without laxa- griping, COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCANDAL: Dry Laxative Again! be- of die-har- recruiters subject hundreds stars to the pressure world d high-scho- ol - of the college "bull market" comes soft and InUVtT:l o'ntmCnt smooth. cause become habit-formin- When You Order substance This hospital-testeworks in a completely different way. It helps natural moisture in the colon work more effectively. Thus by working on the problem, not on you, it helps correct cond Family Weekly. . . stipation as no laxative can. This discovery is now available under the name Regutol. It is not No warning on the label-- no prescription needed. Pleas allow up to four wvtfcs for delivery. The ads are placed by reputable companies. The Items and copy art checked for reliability by Family Weekly, too. If you've any question about mail order, just writ: Service Department, Family Weekly, 641 Lexington habit-formin- Try u Regutoi.-vo- By JOSEPH N. BELL By Mail From may never Avenue, take a laxative again! New HOROSCOPE astonishing insight into future vants that will affect the lives of you, family, your friends! Fascinating book, "WRITE YOUR OWN HOROSCOPE," shows you how to plot Gain York, N.Y. 10022. Write Your Own Write Your Friend's your own individual horoscopa or thoso of friends with amazing skill and to curacy! Mail only Box SCOPE," 4324, Grand Central Sta., $4-9- "HORO-244-pag- e N.Y., N.Y. 10017. Now. ..elastic membrane will Revolutionize Denture Wearing The bin difference between natural -- helps protect gums from bruising teeth and dentures is in performance. and irritation. You eat faster-bi- te Natural teeth are held solidly in place harder, without pain enjoy your by livirtK connective tissue. Without connective tissue, even the most ex- pensive dentures may slip and rock, (urns often get raw and sore. Constant rubbing may cause serious bone damage. Hating can be slow, painful. You speak less clearly. You dare not laugh for fear of dentures dropping. Now chemwta have deuelaped an ar- Fixo-lificial connective membrane Ijknt. It connects dentures with gums and mouth surfaces. It is incredibly effective for Doth uppers and lower. Kixodknt's elastic membrane ab- sorbs the shock of biting and chewing - 1 food more. Kat fruits-prev- nutrition," a hard-to-che- foods-stea- ks, "denture malproblem of older people. ent Fixodknt helps you speak easier, faster, more clearly. When dentures slip you hold them in place with tongue and cheek muscles that ache. Fixodknt helps prevent strain. The special pencil-poin- t dispenser spots Fixodknt with precision -- no oozing over. Often lasts It even resists hot drinks. Dentures that lit are essential to health. See your dentist regularly. Get special Fixodknt at all drug counters. 'round-the-cloc- won't solve your problem by washing your hair! You The finest hair care in the world will not effect a dandruff cure. The dandruff problem goes deeper than that. The trouble begins at the scalp second skin deep and that's where you have to kill dandruff. Clover's Imperial Medicated Ointment, especially formulated Sulfur-G- , tocontain is the proved, scientific way to stop dandruff second-skideep! At first application, Imperial Medicated Ointment goes to work penetrating its healing benefits under the scalp cleansing, conditioning and lubricating the scau back to health. In vigorous, dandruff-fre- e tissue-buildin- g n this healing process, your hair is revitalized at the same time. The formula used in Clover's Imperial Medicated Ointment is approved by leading dermatologists for use by their patients in the treatment of infectious dandruff, dandruff itch and relief from dry scalp. So, try this pleasantly ointment soon. scented, Your druggist has it, or write today for the generous trial size jar that the Clover Company is offering for 25 (to cover mailing costs). Just send your name, address and 25 in coin to: Clover, Dept. 44, 1001 Franklin Avenue, Garden City, N.Y easy-to-us- e down the 1968 roster Midway football players at the University of Notre Dame is a line that reads: 2 215 Santa Ana, Patton, Eric LB-California. Behind that simple Hating is a sensitive young man's flirtation with the e world of college football and an agony of indecision that finally sent him fleeing from his home to think. Eric Patton's senior year in high school was fairly typical of the agony inflicted on several thousand young athletes yearly by the "bull market" m college football players, involving $20 million in annual scholarships. Eric, 17, a center and linebacker at Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana (about 30 miles southeast of Los Angeles), was named Lineman of the Year in his conference and made numerous teams. Eric's dad, Garth, is a fireman in Santa Ana; his mother works at the local post office. Their home is modest and pulsating with children and activity. Until Eric developed his football skills, the Pat-to- n home had not been troubled by longdistance telephone calls, dinners at posh restaurants, weekend flying trips, or carloads of visiting coaches. All of that changed in January, 1968. It started with a cascade of letters about football scholarships from college athletic departments all over the nation. Eric was selective in answering these queries, replying only to those schools in which he was genuinely interested. "The calls came mostly from assistant coaches," recalls Garth Patton. "They always talk in generalities about Eric's interests and how they could be satisfied at that particular school." Close behind these exploratory calls came the alumni, usually wealthy businessmen giving posh parties for prospective footballers. The sell was soft, but the intimation was always present that this is the sort of life that the young man could look forward to if he attended the uni C 6-- high-power- ed big-tim- all-st- ar 26 Family Weekly, November 10, 1908 versity being sold that evening. These affairs were interspersed with telephone calls from big names in professional sports. Two distinguished members of the Los Angeles Rams called Eric and pitched two different schools. A pro quarterback phoned and said to Eric: "I can't tell you where to go, but if you were my kid brother, I'd kick you all the way to Notre Dame." Then came the head coaches, phoning or stopping by the Pattons' small frame house to offer Eric a trip to the campus "to look over the school." Eric made three such weekend trips to Notre Dame, the University of Colorado, and Stanford. By this time, though, he had narrowed his choice to three colleges: Stanford, Notre Dame, and the University of Southern California. The main attraction at U.S.C. was his former coach who had moved to that campus and was recruiting Eric aggressively. Eric felt a loyalty to him that made it difficult for him to say "No." The same loyalty to his father further his problem; Eric's dad complicated wanted him to go to Stanford because it was a "fine school and close enough to see him once in a while." But Eric's heart well-kno- high-scho- ol was elsewhere. Ever since reading a biography of Knute Rockne, he had wanted to play football at Notre Dame. Torn between his own desires and those of the people he loved, Eric would pour out his problems to his girl friend, Peggy Hooper. "He took everything so seriously, so personally," she recalls. "He couldn't understand that they were probably saying the same things to others, and they realized he'd have to say 'no' to someone." In late February, Eric flew to South Bend, Ind., where he was entertained by the Notre Dame football staff and escorted by varsity players telling him what a great opportunity Notre Dame offered. The last afternoon he was there, he was taken to the stadium. He stood there in a snowy February twilight, surrounded, by hanks of empty seats, and heard the |