Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 25 Jun 1959, p. 8

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The Truth About A Famous Fight gives the lowdown on how this strictly erroneous legend came - into being, Take it a AWAY, Mr. It's interesting, but also dis- turbing, to note how quickly and smoothly legend can ce his- tory. There's a legend afoot today that Tommy Farr, from Tony- andy, Wales, gave Joe Louis a d time in the ptize ring one night in 1987, and was robbed of the decision in thelr heavyweight , title fight. The other day, when . Tommy was' visiting here in the States, your correspondent was struck by the fact that practi. cally everyone who was born since--let's say--the Hoover Ad- ministration has come to ace t this proposition as gospel, to Mr. Farr did nothing to knock it down, To be frank with you, I hadn't expected that he would. 'I won't say that I beat Looey," Tom observed thoughtfully, on the point came up, "but it can't be said that Looey beat me." Oh, yes, it can. The fight is clear in my memory. I put in with the officials, who gave Louis anywhere from eight to thirteen: of the fifteen rounds. Joe had tender right hand that night; hs he used his left almost exclusive- ly, and turned Farr's face into what looked like $1.50 worth of hamburger. When the fight was over, Tommy did not claim vic- tory. That thought came to him later, through one of those cur- fous sidelights of history that produce legends. Few eyewitnesses believed F - had won. One of these was Clem McCarthy, who called the bout by radio, on a national network. lement was a peerless caller of horse races. Fight-calling was new to him. He liked the way that Farr charged into Louis's left hand face-first. He was sat- Isfled that these tactics' had won -the fight for Farr--and so was his audience of 20 million souls, 'The call was Clem's last one or a, while, Next day, when ncle Mike Jacobs," the promo- ter, learned that there had been two fights, McCarthy's and the real one, he swallowed his syn- thetic teeth, turned the color of a dahlia, and stripped Clem of his epaulets. This action came too ate to stem the tide of myth. enty million radio fans hand- ed the wrong story down to their children, so that today the Louis- Farr fight is firmly fixed in the list of famous fight legends, along with: 1--The legend that Jim Jeffries was drugged in his fight with Jack Johnson. (Don't worry, friends, I will not claim that I was there.) .2--The legend that Carpentier almost" knocked out Dempsey with a right hand in the second round, (The motion pictures show at Dempsey took a hal S backward.) Ps sep 3--The legend that Billy Conn would have beaten Louis in their first fight if he hadn't with Hi- ernian recklessness, suddenly tried to knock Louis out. (I don't think Conn was ahead, but the salient point is this: He had used up his speed and gone flatfooted, and had no choice but to punch and be punched.) Tom Farr now believes in the Louis-Farr legend, and, for my VIKING PRINCE -- Denmark's Prince Christian, 15, wears his viking costume, shield and all, at a Copenhagen rehearsal. The the outfit Prince. will wear when he takes part In a viking festival this summer In Rams- gate, England. money, he's entitled to. In his. heyday, the squat Welshmah fought 66 rounds in New York with America's five best heavy- weights,, and was never off his feet. If a maker of history can't tell it his way, what becomes of Field Marshal Viscount Mont- gomery? Or, for that matter, Mr. Eisenhower, Churchill, and U.S. Grant? Tommy has been in our midst as a journalist, covering the un- pleasantness between Floyd Pat- terson and Brian London. He's a rarity among ex-athlete journa- lists, in that he uses his own "words in print. They are a much higher class of words than the ones he used in the ring to Jim Braddock, Max Baer, Lou Nova, and Red Burman when he was trying, without great success, to push their teeth down their throats. Farr was the most up- right British fighter who ever came among us. Going from loss to loss, he earned some $200,000 here. To be exact historically, per- haps I should say that Joe Gould, his American manager, earned some of it for him. Mr. Gould adopted Farr after his loss to Braddock. It was while discuss- ing his own genius in obtaining: rich matches for a losing fighter that Gould, in burst of pride, said: "I take off my hat to no manager." "What of it?" said the late Dumb Dan Morgan. "You don't even take it off when you eat." "Yes," said "the critic of the local paper ab- solutely tore my new play to bits." "Oh, I shouldn't worry about him," said his friend, "He only repeats what éverybody else says." : il WOT 'IT. ME? '= Rub e@lded to his feet by the 11th round of his ; legged Brian london, of England, is dlers after he was knocked out in ith Floyd Patterson, the playwright, A Lama's Flight Into Freedom A 70-year-old lama, who for many years had: not ventured + outside the. walls of his Tibetan - noriastery: Jusdenly. found him- self sca J ed peaks" and crawling on all fours up a rough ribbon-sized track to a pass 18,000 feet in the sky. wo bay aller ol 1 lage retinue, found herself hus- tled up and down mountains by burly muleteers and hoisted over dangerous - looking crags by mountain porters, while her anx- fous lady mother tried not to look down into the dizzy, awful depths of yawning chasms. A young man, accustomed from very early childhood to a life of which he always was the aenter, to an exclusiveness rare in the modern world, to 'long periods of unmolested calm and meditation, was pushed, prodded. and harried along by a multi- tude, which only yesterday rare- ly presumed to look directly upon his once-serene counten- ance. - This is a facet of the story of the flight of the Dalai Lama and his followers from his capital, Lhasa, to the Indian border. It . .is an epic full of adventure, ofe narrow escapes from capture, of, selfless devotion and sacrifice, of the indomitable will to remain" |' free. It also is a tale of precision' teamwork and good organization; of planning and the correct use of knowledge of the world's highest mountains and their un- predictable moods. Anyone who has trekked for pleasure even in the Himalayan uplands bordering Tibet will know what amount of fore- thought is required. Everything one needs has to be carried along; the countryside provides nothing. The weather changes hourly. Tracks marked on maps usually disappear when ap- proached. The roof of the world constantly is orumbling into giant landslides and avalanches and the straight line hardly ever is 'the shortest distance between two given points. In the Hima- layas, of course, there never are two given points, Imagine then a journey under- taken hurriedly over what must be the world's most inhospitable terrain by a party of over a hun- * dred, including many no longer young men: and women, a party, moreover, 'which had to travel by forced marches by night in order to evade capture. The Dalai Lama, now it can be told, deliberately followed a route first eastward out of Lhasa, then south toward the Tibet- Bhutan borders, then east again toward the Indian state of As- sam. His zigzags took him through heavy concentrations of Chinese troops and were based on the certain knowledge that a group of Khampas -- Tibetan rebels--had volunteered to lead the Chinese authoritjes south to- ward Nepal, promising them cer- tain capture of the whole party. The Khampas knew that when their fictitious route was dis- covered they probably would have to pay the supreme penalty. They did, but their leader and ruler earned valuable time as the Communists were led uphill and downdale. Meanwhile, the escaping party was crossing the Kyi River at an altitude of 19,000 feet with hardly any mountain equipment. The river negotiated, the trek- kers then dropped down some 17,000 feet onto a low, barren plateau and then immediately began again a steep ascent along narrow ledges with sky-high walls of ice-polished rock on one side and chasms on the other. To do six or seven miles a day over this type of country is usu- ally considered good going, es- pecially if a comfortable and well-prepared camp lies at the end of the march. The Dalai Lama sometimes had to travel as many as 20 miles a day, or rather night, with no settled prospect of a resting place, with no definite news of hostileg lurk- ing in the vicinity, without wea- ther bulletins to guide him. And in the mind's eye of the whole party was the turmoil it had left behind, with no immediate prospects of knowing what was going on in their homeland. This 'suspense continued right up to the end of the journey, which also took the party across the mighty Brahamaputra River in rickety, improvised wooden rafts. Three days before the -Dalai Lama reached the Indian border, he sent ahead by special courier a message to Mr. Nehru asking for asylum. The message somehow took six days: to reach New Delhi--en route, as subse- quent events proved, it was in- tercepted--and while "the re- fugees approached the border and waited with increasing im- patience there was imminent' danger of last-minute capture. Only the fact that this region is firmly held by "the rebels pre- vented the Chinese from pulling off a dramatic coup. So ended 19 days of unrelenting toil and hazard. The story will be told and re- 'told in Asian lands until it be- ST / Yad Puss (Er. { 1 fea NATE SIR SUNDAE Ado A I RPS ATA ELS FRED RC -:- CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING -:- AGENTS WANTED EXTRA Cash In Your Spare Time. J show Jour, friends' cur aE dusk Stationery, Gifts, Write for i») fore Ltd, 489 B, Queen Bast. EVERMAN Real Estate requires LW farm agents in your loc . 880 B GO INTO BUSINESS for yourself. Sell our excitl house- wares, watches and other products not ound In stores. No competition. 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Send 2lbs. * -K- » Ban 'Septl-K-leen postpald Name Address . - asul® -- [] Money Order [J Cash for $3.00 > BABY CHICKS "TAKE advantage of speclal prices on Bray dayold heavy breed cockerels. Prompt shipment dayold and some started dual purpose pullets and cock- erels. Some Ames pullets, also Leg- oo Jun yy bioilers Dou, agent, or write Bray Hatch. ery, 120 John North, Hamliton, Ont. BOOKS BOOKS for the young and old. Books i modern times and trends. Catalogue . Write: Book Mart, P.O. B 09, ence, Missouri, ox JELF-MASTERY and YOGA books. In- ng free catalogue e tod -- "Books". $ Rin 1 Marlborough. Burn: aby, BC 4 urn BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE R Sale -- Machine Shop, Woodwork- B8hop, ving apartment, in the pret- est town in Ontario, Reasonable. No sis Jioaco, Box No. 188, 123-18th treet, New Toronto, Ont. ESSEX COUNTY LOCATION HOTEL, includes building, all fixtures, equipment, plus 6 furnished cottages, 2 bedroom house with all convenien. ces, also 30 acres of good productive fand, beverage rooms have 159 seating oapaclty, presently doing 8000 gallons, which can he Increased, a real family business, full price $48,500.00, would donsiqer property In trade. We also ave other business opportunities. JOHN KUBIS, Realtor Kingsville, Ont. -- RE. 3-40212 comes a legend which every schoolboy secretly will want to emulate. Already in the heat- enveloped bazaars in the plains of Hindustan, where men gather to gossip and grumble, it is be- ing used as a convincing argu- ment to prove that freedom in- deed is worthwhile. The Dalai Lama, meanwhile, is back in his beloved Himalayas, albeit on the wrong side, within sight of the eterna snows. All India hopes his sojourn will be pleasant but temporary. By Sharakl, Sabavala in The Chris- tian Science Monitor. How Can 1? By Anne Ashley Q. How can I frost the glass of a window? A. Dissolve 6 ounces of Epsom salfs in about 20 ounces of warm water. To this add 2 ounces of white dextrin, which will act as an adhesive when the mixture is applied to the glass, The salts will crystalljze into a covering similar to hoar frost. Q. How can I determine whe- ther yeast is old? \ A. If there are dark spots on the yeast cake, it is better not to use it as some of the yeast plants are dead. A good cake of yeast is moist, uniformly creamy in color, and can be easily brok- en into crumbs. Q. How can I soften the skin? A. A good treatment for soft- ening and whitening the face, neck, arms, and hands is to mix a little raw cornmeal with sour milk, and apply. Q. How can TI keep chamois soft? A. After having used the chamois, wash it carefully in warm soapy water; then press carefully on a flat surface to dry. Do not hang it in the air or place on the, radiator, as this will only make' the skin hard and dry. Q. How can I keep eggs from bursting while boiling? A. They will not burst if one end of each egg is pricked with a needle before placing in the water. This makes an outlet for air and prevents the shell from cracking. "erators $85.00 ande® up, BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALD woNpEruL Seneny jog industriel i i RR A 'oroato 3d possible franchise bof wl x 13% iy in blab 'gH Garage vu x 90', plus an addition x 30, fjsisting of showroom, Ww y e, stockroom, 2 holsts an e eated with hot water by oll, lished 14 years. Aggressive car dealers or garage operators should inv ° t! business. Wm. J. McLeod, Estate Broker, Acton, Ont. Phone y FEMALE HELP WANTED CHIEF DIETITIAN REQUIRED A SPLENDID op unity for a dieti- aniein atred em tian with or bility req by the Beck start immediately. Five-day, forty-hour week, generous sick leave, va -] abil - orlal Sanatorium to NURSES WANTED SUMMER RESORTS JOY atm friendly I ny Sto THE TORONTO WESTERN HW oN Subs [12s OSPITAL GENERAL STAPF AUnszs $00.00 fm LO with an WRITE Siving bt de Io 0 NURSERY STOCK rg A yy Jlenyipad, R.R. No. 1 Po erry, On- "SCOTCH Pine Xmas Tree Seedlings. Famous French blue strain, Order now. Spring delivery. Lake Simgoe Planta. tions, Box 1, 1 Letitia St. Yat Phone PA. §-2675. pension plans in effect. Cottage resid- ence (unfurnished) or furnished suite available at nominal cost. Salary. com- mensurate with experience and quali. cations. Apply, giving age, tral A experience and refernces to the Busl- ness Manager, Beck Memori{al Sanatori- um, London, Ontario. All replies treat." ed confidentially, TECHNICIAN FEMALE for general laboratory in a 100-bed hospital near Toronto. Resld- ence accommodation and meals avail able. Apply to ADMINISTRATOR Peel Memorial Hospital BRAMPTON, ONTARIO FOR SALE METAL ROOFING 28 GAUGE galvanized ribbed roofing less than $8,785 per square, freight extra, Send measurements for freight pald estimate. Also speclal prices on aluminum roofing. NATIONAL METAL ROOFING 1104 Plessis, Montreal 24--DEP. W PROPANE GAS and ELECTRIC refrig- Stoves from 9.00. S.T.O.P. Limited 141 Ossington. oronto SAFETY SHOES STEEL toecaps. Boots or oxfords. Men's sizes B to 13. $7.09 Postpaid. MEGGINSON'S SHOES, Sault Ste. Marle, Ontario. "FUR FARM ANIMALS WILL NUTRIA BE YOUR FUTURE? ALL the signs point to a bright and brilliant market for this luxury fur. But success will come only through proper breeding methods, quality foun. dation stock, plus a program based on sound business methods, We offer all of this to you as a rancher, using our exclusive breeders plan. Prices and in. formation on request. Canadian Nutria Ltd. Offices: B67 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Ontario: Ranch location, Rich. mond Hill, Ontario. GARDEN MACHINERY PLANET Jr. Garden tractors, tillers, seeders, wheel hoes. John C. Graham Co., Distributors, Leamington, Ont. INSTRUCTION EARN more! Bookkeeping, Salesman- shlp, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les- sons 30¢. Ask for free circular No. 33, Canadian Correspondence Courses, 1200 Bay Street, Toronto. LIVESTOCK FOR SALE "DUAL PURPOSE SHORTHORNS" PRESENT offering -- cows, bred helf- ers, bulls, and bull calves, of all ages. eds and roans. Write or visit the arm. Ernest A. Peart, Caledonla, On. tario, MERCHANDISE FOR SALE BALE Ladles' Blouses 2 for $1.50. At- tractive House dresses $1.25, two for $2.25. Teenage boys' drawers, wool, long, $1.50. Haréld Richards, Clarkes Beach, Nfld. "MEDICAL IT'S PROVEN -- EVERY SUFFERER OP RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN $1.25 Express Collect OTTAWA POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you. Itching, scaling and burning ecze- ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless odorles olntment Fagard es of how stubborn or hopeless ey seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3.00 PER JAR , POST'S REMEDIES 2865 $1. Clair Avenue East TORONTO NURSES WANTED GRADUATE Nurses and Certified Nursing Assistants required for modq- ern 40-bed hospital. Graduate Nurses comnience at $265 and Certified Nurs ing Assistants at $165. Shift allowance payuble to both grades. For further details, apply to: SUPERINTENDENT OF NURSES New Liskeard & District Hospital New Liskeard, Ontarlo GENERAL DUTY NURSES FOR 100-bed hospital, up-to-date fact litles In a beautiful location on the the shore of Lake Erle, Residence avail able. Salary $260.00 month with recos- nition for P.G. courses. 44-hour week at present, APPLY DIRECTOR OF NURSING Port Colborne General Hospital PORT COLBORNE, ONT, OF INTEREST TO ALL BUY at Discount Prices! Make huge savings on Appliances, Silverware, Housewares, Tools, Toys, ete. Send for Free, four color Catalogue. b N. ell, Rogers Enterprises, P.O. Box 391, California, U.S.A. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Diporsuniiy Learn Halrdressin Pleasant, dignified profession; good wages, Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Nustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor St. W,, Toronto Branches: 44 King St.,, W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PERSONAL $20.00 REWARD - TWENTY Dollars reward for Informa- tion leading to the purchase of a Model A Ford Touring or Roadster Car. Send information to Ga Campbell, R.R. No. 2 Burford, Ontario, or phone collect to H. 9-2681 Burford. ADULTS! Personal Rubber Goods! 36 assortment for $2.00. Finest quality, tested, guaranteed. Mailed in pl sealed package plus free Birth Control booklet and catalogue of supplles. Western Distributors. Box 24-TF, Regina, Sask. PHOTOGRAPHY SAVE! SAVE SAVE! Films developed and 12 magna prints in album 60¢ 2 magna prints in album 40¢ Reprints 8¢ each KODACOLOR Developing roll $1.00 (not including prints). Color prints 35¢ each extra. Ansco and Ektachrome 33 mm. 20 ex- posures mounted in slides $1.23. Color prints from slides 35¢ each. Money refunded in full for unprinted nega- tives. FARMERS' CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT, ONT. ' POULTRY BARRED ROCKS still hard to beat for eggs and meat. Thirty-eight years per sonal selection behind our closed flock. Accredited flock, Registered Hatchery. Tom Kenny, Shanty Bay, Ontarlo. © STAMPS AND COINS ATTENTION Stamp Collectors! 107 dif: ferent from Asia, Europe, Africa, ete. only 10¢ with approvals. Ludwig J Bergh, 2902 North 28th, Tacoma . Washington. ) STAMP collectors -- send for free rice list. Postpaid both ways. Hamll on Stamp Co., 5608 Sagra Rd. Balt more 12, Md.,, U.S.A. Ea UP to $200.00 paid for 1921 Canadian B¢. 20-page "Premium Buying Guide" fos prices pald for colns 25¢. New fare "How to Invest in Canadlan oins 2b For both send only 33¢ to: farles, Box 833-WP, Calgary. WILL buy Canadian coins in good con- ition, Gold coins and "Shin Plasters". ouble face value Queen Victoria coins. Half dollars pay $1.00, quarters B0¢, dimes and nickels 25¢, large cents B¢ each, 1947 and 1948 half dollars 1.00, silver dollars 1937, 1938, 1947 048 -- $3.00. Mall or dellver to Harry Kalbflelsch, 92 Downie Street, Strat- ford, Ont. Payment by return mall. SUMMER CAMPS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS CHILDREN'S CAMP for boys and girls 6-17. All land and Water sports under college-trained leadership. Registered Nurse. Home cooked meals. Six ponies and horses to ride at no extra cost. Screened Insulated cabins. Aqua plan- ing and Water skling. 20th year for Canada's outstanding Camp. Highly recommended, Reasonable. Dr. and Mrs. Martin, Directors. Write for free fol der: "Wildwood" Vaudreuil. Quebec. SUMMER PROPERTIES FOR SALE BUY, Sel), successuily, Port Carling, Muskoka area, speclalizing In summer roperties. Call 81. E. D. Milner. Real or. © BANCROFT SUMMER resort property and vear round home. Bay Lake Lodge, 4 mlles from Bancroft on Highway 62, 355 acres and B,000 ft. shorellne. Lodge containing lounge and dining room to seat 32, fully equipped kitchen with master chef stoves and grill, refrig. erators, deep freeze, etc, and owner's Hving quarters. All fully insulated for year round dwelling. 10 bungalows with stone fireplaces, refrigerators, 2 plece flush toilets, 3 beds and fully equipped for sleeping. Recreation bullding with sun lounge baths and hot showers. 12 boats. A bungalow eamp are excellence, Price $65,000. Sands and Bateman Limited, Box 176 Peterborough, Riverside 23441 or 2. 4591. Salesman George Shepherd. Nast. Tender terms. Henry W. Sanborn. i he os oa ous G Cottages t at Reon 'ok ig : U one, ™ t s, beau sand beach, erye 10 Sas Yor ih and Ir i 3ottages. RE, memee, Phone 108. aroi winning," ning Sein oats; rates with meal d and $34 weekly. Wee for cider. en! .0., Ont, PORT SYDNEY MUSKOKA, ONTARIO On Beautiful Mary Lake SAFE sandy beach, boating, water sng recreation director. Delightful woodland walks. For a perfect holl- day in every way, visit Mary Lake. For rther information write Port Sydney 'ourist Promotion Association. TEACHERS WANTED . PORT Lambton Separate School re: quires teacher to teach Grades 1-4. Ap- ly, stating qualifications, last Inspec- or, salary expected. Dutles to com. Sense, Sept., 1939. Apply Dan McEvoy. ecretary, Port Lambton, Ont. PROTESTANT teacher for new school on No. 7 highway, 6 miles from Sarnia. Grades 1 to 8. Apply stating qualifica- tions and salary expected to the Secre- tary, Mrs. Irvin Harrison, RR, 1, Sarnia, PUSLINCH TOWNSHIP SCHOOL AREA WELLINGTON COUNTY REQUIRES teachers. Generous salary schedule, $200 annual increment. Apply stating qualifications, experience, de- nomination and name of last inspector, to, Willlam McCormick, R.R. Pus- linch. Taylor 4-1099, Guelph, PROTESTANT teacher for S.S. No. 4, Yarmouth, Elgin County. Small school, all grades. SALARY, $2,000-$3,100, depending on qualifications. APPLY, stating qualifications, experl- ence, and name of last Inspector, to Mrs. John W. Millman, R.R. 1, Sparta, Ont, Dutles to begin September, 1939. 8.8. No. 4, Albion, Sandhill, County of Peel, requires fully quatifien teacher. Grades to be taught, 1 to 8. APPLY H, Wright, Sec.-Treas. R.R. 3, Mono Road, Ont. TEACHERS WANTED BY ORO TOWNSHIP SCHOOL AREA SALARY schedule, minimum for quali- fled teacher $3 00d + ~annual Incre- ment of $200 to m um of $4,000. Fifty dollars hy year for four years will be allowed for experience. WHEN applying state experience, age, religion and name of former inspector. John G. Currie, Oro Statlon, Ont. TECUMSETH TOWNSHIP SCHOOL AREA is In need of 6 teachers for rural 1. room schools commencing in September. Schools are In Simcoe County around Beeton ¢0-50 miles north of Toronto. Salary Schedule Minimum tor Short Term Cert. $2600 Minimum for 1st or 2nd sun 2 LJ TH, as fad Class Certificate 3000 Annual Increment -- 200 Allowance for Experience (up to 3 years) yearly ... = Maximum Please state qualifications, experience. religlon and name of last Inspector. J. F. Houghton--Newton Robinson, Ont. "VACATION PROPERTIES FOR SALE 4000 PENSACOLA, Florida, suburban acres bought by Toronto cltizens. Ask your neighbor about that. Fly down and buy these bargains while they 1318 N. 12th ave. Pensacola. RO == Jit ISSUE 21 -- 1959 } SLEEP fr' wr TO-NIGHT a AND RELIEVE NERVOUSNESS A SMLOAY TO-MORROW] | i To be hoppy and tronqull Instead, of : EAL nervous or for a good night's sleep, take 3 Sedicin tablets according to directions, Co SEDICIN® $1.00--$4.95 ; TABLETS Orvy Stores Oslyl If You're TIRED 5 ALL THE TIME 0 Now and then everybody gets a { "'tired-out" feeling, and may be V bothered by backaches. Perhaps noth- ing seriously wrong, just a temporary { condition caused by urinary irritation or : bladder discomfort. That's the time to l take Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's help 3 { stimulate the kidneys to relieve this PAR condition which may often cause back- ache and tired feeling, Then you feel Vi better, rest better, work better. Get Dodd's Kidney Pills now. Look for the y blue box with the red band at all drug it counters. You can depend on Dodd's. co ASK FLOATING ROMANCE? -- Sailing past some towering rocks off Italy's famed Capri Island, ne former Iranian Empress Saroya and Italian Prince Raimondo Orsini (right) relax on a motor- Ys boat with two unidentified companions. Saroya and the Prince are vacationing there, and an rumors that they plan to marry ore Increasing.

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