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Show y PROVO EVENING HERALD, TUESDAY. JUNE 5. 1928. FAI.I0US STARS . f PAGE. FIVE 'v- - t HID CAREERS I of MkM- - ie DasteriMua Amy t. and Wiboa of v. - M Through UENT U F4RRELL B , Rperts Write coDef JralMrUI ferric Tb end of th bring to a ekiN KEA - . " . .. . ' 4 )im U"vir. mow eia-alty career or two or b rated aad widely renowned atav letea of this feneration. With the aenlor claae nt the Unl- waltjr of MtchUma. Benny Ooater--' baan win step forward for fela groa and then move off the under rraduat campus. He will leave b bind htm to the symnaalura a of football, basketball and baseball tas that wore for threw yearr of honorable and creditable sank aa a vanity athlete. Ooaterbssa and WUaaa High up amid the plctureami aetX Him of the beautiful plain Wert Point. Cadet Harry Wtlaoa wilt step from the ranks, swear the oath of allegiance to he fla and march away as LUrutenaat Wtlaoa of the United States Army. The army will sllow a most dlstln- rulshed "sav tall" but at the lock er room at the military academy the nam of LiKht Horse Harry" will be known and revered as long as those renerals whoa names are perpetuated in statuary In the ahad- dows of the parade around. Of three two celebrated athletes the fame of Harry Wilson probably was more widely circulated because Benny Oosterbaan had only three years of national prominence at Michigan and Wilson had three years at Penn State and four years at the "Point" ' Wilson had-alsthe settlnff of four Army-Nav- y frames In which to enact the role of a highly advertised principal and although Mk-h- l Ran has her great moments in the middle weat no other, moments oe y xnv football field can compare to those of the Army-Na- v gafnea It msv be, however. Kat In circumstances, Oosterbaan was the more fortunate because his grea record as a nine-Mtvarsity man was made In th pe4'vl restricted by strict eligibility rulea . o ' ' -- fimSM-- Oiir SPECIAL PURCHASE Brings 25 Saving 0n M en's Fine Suits l 27 ' - 50 $O750 a j rr more Wilson, recipient of manv- (, TWENTY-FIV- ly Wilson is Versatile Wilson was a varsity man In foot ball, basketball and lacrosse from the time he entered the academy and he play baseball an" several other games. He was also-coul- at Penn State and although he covered himself with glory at West Point in football he did not heach the heights that player of his experience should have attained. He was" never referred tp as the greatest halfback that ever played. Don Miller, one of th celebrated Four Horsemen of Notre Dame, ex' plained the Wilson case by advancing the theory that no player could stand four years of hard eoI)ae football without burning out But Biff Jones, coach of the Army football team, said that Wilson was ' cracked up so badly playing lacrosse that he was broken physically and was never In shape to brino out the football he had In him. For some time and forever. If the Army andJMavy do not make up Wilson will be renowned as the person who broke up athletic relations between two of the biggest Institutions In the United Statea He may not be proud of It but he can't help getting some kick out of having been the person who beat the Navy so many times that the Navy quit playing. He had three shots at the midshipmen as a Pena State star snd four more years In the garb of a cadet was too much for them. v-.A Star V. f r ri'i rtn: iv I. 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There isn't a hank in the country would pay you so much. And you take no risk, for die suits compriseotir regular stock backed by our. usual guarantee of entire Satisfaction. letters, does not boast of It because he realises that seven vears of var sity campaigning acted against rec- ognltlon of his record as being highThere may be frAind greater tooU ball players than Oosterbaan on the lint of immortals but he ranked with any end of all time because for three years he was against competition the old Immor tals never had to compete against. His great football record Overshadowed the fact that for three years he was a vsrslty letter man In' baa ketball and ft baseball and that hia last service at Michigan was devoted to a baseball nine that won the Western conference championship. m i TO pre-isel- " w. ) ) V t Silk-and-Lis- le Hose 50c Linen Handkerchiefs 35c $3.00 Rayon Union Suits Terry Beach Robes .... ..$5.25 Mercerized Pajamas . . . $2.50 Shirts and Shorts, each, $1.00 Wool Golf Hose Sport :Sioes, buck ' $25 " ..... . .$6.00 ; BROTHERS TAL0R y ly..-.s;ioK NEWS - . I 4 :' Trr ."v: r VkVti -- vWBvI CONGRATULATIONS Although Bernard Toco" Frailer weighs only 105 pounds, or perhaps because he weighs only that touch, he is the leading runner at th University of Kansas and the best t wornHer . 10 the Missouri valley. He expects to make th Olympic team. He recently set a new conference reewrt by covering thi distance la f minute itZ seconds. ft it f0 THE NEW W. F. SHHIVER N I PHONE 24 AND 25 STORE. 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