: "hustling. i tory. . win SEEK 100-GAME MARK Yankees And Dodgers Work Up Contest To Stir Interest By BEN PHLEGAR | Associated Press Sports Writer Now that New York Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers virtually ave run off and hidden from the t of the clubs, they're working 'a little intramural competition | 5 hold their interest. L Pheir new goal is 100 victories f wach, well within range but still @: mark that will keep them The Dodgers, with 39 games left, i» . heed to win 22 to hit the century ¢ mark--a figure reached by only wo other Brooklyn clubs in his- . The Yankees will have to 21 of their last 38. Ya teams in the past have reached 100 i" 'or more eight times, but not in the i ™nto sole possession of second place | || "ball League Monday night -- the | \ "pace - | acpupled with Montreal's loss. { « The Wings now are 2'2 games 'back of the herd. The Royals, who Jast 11 years. If both clubs make it, this would be the first season since 1942 to produce a pair of 100-game cham- . pions. In that year the Yankees : Gwon 103 and St. Louis Cardinals fook 106 and the series. i Both the Yankees and Dodgers (fattened their margins over their | nearest rivals Monday night. The {New Yorkers won a pair of one- |sided games from Philadelphia !10-3 and 9-0 and moved nine games lin front of the idle Chicage White | Sox. Brooklyn came from behind on ! Duke Snider's two-run homer in the ninth and then beat Pittsburgh on Gil Hodges' three-run blast in the 115h, 5-2. The Dodgers gained half a game on the unscheduled Milwaukee Braves and lead by 8%, games. In the only other activity New York Giants and Philadelphia Phil- lies split a pair at the Polo Grounds. Only 2.885 cash customers watched the Phils win the first game 5-2 and bow in the second 6-0. The doubleheader was the third in three days between the two clubs. The Giants won the series, four games to two. The Phils clinched the first game with four runs in the eighth Andy Hansen, making his first start in three years. Johnny Lindell tamed the Dodgers on three hits until Bobby Morgan opened the ninth with a single and Snider followed with his 28th homer. In the 11th Lindell got into trouble by walking Snider |and Jackie Robinson and running | the count to 3 and 1 on Hodges. The big first baseman then hit his 26th home run. Snider got three of the Dodgers' seven hits. Yogi Berra hit his 21st home run in the Yankees' first game romp. Whitey Ford picked up his 15th victory, but'needed help from Tom Gorman in the seventh. In the sec- ond game the Yankees opened with five runs, more than enough for | Bob Kuzava who scattered 11 hits effectively enough to score a shut- out. Joe Collins homered twice, | Bill Martin once. { Although they weren't scheduled St. Louis Browns were eliminated | mathematically from the pennant chase. Even if they won their re- Tennis Title Matches Down To Semi-finals OTTAWA (CP)--A marathon pro: gram of singles matches today had brought the two major competi- tions of the Canadian junior tennis championships -- men's and wo- men's stages after four days of play. But the singles matches will have to await the sixth day of play Wednesday. Today was given over largely to second- and third-round doubles matches. Several third-round matches ver crept forward across the score | Rassmussen, were played off Monday in the women's singles division. In the men's side, four players got through the fourth round to the |duchess, still has to meet tough |Halkard, London quarter-finals: D. Arnaud of Hemp- | opposition in Phyllis Saganski of | Wilkés, Brant. stead, N.Y., Jacques Paquette of | Hamtramck, Mich., holder of the | Biasatti, Waterl. Ottawa, J. McLean of Buffalo, N.Y., and Kalman Hettleman of Baltimore. The play gave no indication that | there is anyone capable of stopping Hettleman, top-seeded foreign player, in a march toward the vacant title. In the two matches which put him into the fourth round, he lost only three games. He then easily disposed of Dale {inning off Dave Koslo who started | maining 36 games the Browns Jackson of Moose Jaw, Sask., 6-0, | his first game since June 23. The Giants took the nightcap from 'would finish two games behind the | Yankees' present mark. By THE CANADIAN PRESS Rochester Red Wings climbed in the International Base- result of their 11-7 victory over the setting Buffalo Bisons gost a 53 1l-inning decision to i jBalfilnore Orioles, are 3% games off the pace. A hometown crdwd saw Ro- s chester score six runs with two out -. | 2in the second inning to stun the * Bisons The Herd reached starter Dennis Rochester Red Wings' Take Second Spot In League Bi / his 11th win against eight losses. A bad throw to first by Mon- treal shortstop Humberto Fernan- dez gave the Orioles the triumph at Baltimore. | Stan Jok opened the Oriole 1ith {with a single off Tom LaSorda ' land stole second as Jack Graham | Philadelphia | struck out. LaSorda was lifted and Art Fabbro took over. He retired Damon Phillips, who had hit two homers and batted in three runs. Marty Tabacheck rolled to Fernan- dez whose throw was low and skidded past Rocky Nelson at first, Jok scoring. Phillips' second homer in the {ninth forced the extra inai MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League W L Pet. GBL .681 | | | | | | New York | Chicago | Cleveland | Boston Washington 603 9 .561 14 .542 16 A492 22 .410 31% | Detroit +365 36'2 |'St. Louis 1347 39 | | Tuesday | | Washington at New York (night) | St. Louis at Chicago (2-night) Cleveland at Detroit (night) Philadelphia at Boston (night) First New York Aadalnhi 000 112 204--10 11 0 | At Springfield, the tail-end Cubs . Reeder for two runs in the first, won their fourth straight, defeat- i i : sbefore Ellis Deal took over and |ing Ottawa Athletics 2-1--Walt Bre | Fricano, Martin 9 a 020 000 100-- 3 10 Ford, Gorman (7) and Berra; Murray. WP: Ford. LP: Fricano. #stopped them for the next six in-|rucki's two-run single in the first! HR. New York--Berra. 4 nings. Outfielder Wally Moon » Whacked a three-run homer in the «Rochester rally. Deal registered {carrying the Cubs through. | Toronto and Syracuse had an open date. INTERNATIONAL | LEAGUE W L Pet. GBL Buffalo 49 585 Rochester 7 573 2% Montreal 566 31% Baltimore 533 7% Toronto .508 10%: Ottawa 452 17% Syracuse .442 18% Springfield 331 32 69 65 63 56 53 40 Tuesday Montreal at Baltimore (2-twi-nite) | Syracuse at Toronto (2-twinight) Ottawa at Springfield (night) Buffalo at Rochester (night) Montreal 001.002 010 00-- 4 9 1 Baltimore 001 200 001 01-- 5 9 0 LaSorda, Fabbro (11) and Yelen: Fox, Peterson (8) Herrin (8) and Tabacheck. WP: Herrin. LP: LaSorda. HR: Baltimore--Phillips (2). Ottawa 000 000 100-- 1 6 0 Springfield 200 000 00x-- 2 7 0 Rozek and Shantz; Elston and Burbrink. Buffalo 200 000 023-- 7 12 1 Rochester 060 111 20x--11 15 1 Nevel, Coppage (2), Weiss (5) and Lakeman: Reeder, Deal (1) Crimian (9) and Rapp. WP: Deal. LP: Nevel. HR: Rochester--Moon. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Brooklyn--Billy Peacock, 117%, Los Angeles, outpointed Henry (Pappy) Gault, 118, Spartanburg, 8. C., 12 (for North American ban- tamweight championship). Salt Lake City--Nack Nelson, 184, Tooele, Utah, drew with Chuck Woodworth, 184, Provo, Utah, 10. South Gatle, Calif.8Phil Kim, 143%, Honolulu, stopped Baby Ike, 145, South Gate, 5. Remember When. . . Sam Snead almost lost the Cana dian open golf championship and the $1,000 first prize at Toronto 13 Years ago today when a 15-foot putt stopped six inches short of the cup. The extra putt left Snead tied with Jug MeSpaden, defending champion from inchester, Pa. But Snead won the playoff by 71 strokes to 72. Marlene And Barbara To Meet Again NEW YORK (CP) Marlene | Stewart and Barbara Romack re- {new their rivalry next week in the {33rd United States women's ama- teur golf championship at West Barrington, R.I. Thus Miss Stewart, 19-year-old Second New York 510 000 300-- 9 11 1 | Philadelphia 000 000 000-- 0 11 1 | Kuzava and Berra, Silvera (8); | Coleman, Fanovich (8) and Astroth LP: Coleman. HRs: New York -- Collins | Martin. National League W L Pct. GBL .678 802 8% 544 15% 543 1515 .500 20% 449 Zot» .386 331% .309 44 (2), Brooklyn Milwaukee |St. Louis | Philadelphia {New York | Cincinnati i Chicago Pittsburgh 47 52 53 57 65 70 85 Tuesday |New York at Brooklyn (might) | Milwaukee at Cincinnati (night) Chicago at St. Louis (night) | Pittsburgh at Philadelphia (nght) | | Vernon, Wash | Minoso, Chi | Rosen, Cle | Bauer, NY 6-1 to move into the quarter-finals. singles--to their decisive | Jackson was sixth-seeded among the Canadians. ~ Pierre Lambert of Victoriaville, Que., firstseeded Canadian, ad- | vanced to the fourth round with a 16-0, 6-1 win over Bill White of Cal- | gary. . Hettleman meets Paquette, third seeded Canadian player, in a quar | ter-final match. | In all three women's singles | classes--junior women, girls and | juvenile girls--the name of 13- year-old Ann Barclay of Vancou- | sheets. But the western miss, with perky face and the assurance of a | juvenile girls' title, and 17-year-old | Mariette Laframboise of Montreal, | defending junior women's cham. | pion. | Miss Lafram boise won two !singles Monday and teamed with | | Eleanor Dodge, also of Montreal. | for a doubles victory. Miss Saganski, defending cham- !pion in the juvenile girls' singles, moved into the semi-final of that event when she crushed Dian Dod- | well of Oshawa, Ont., 6-0, 6-0. Soccer Still Reigns By DEREK JAMESON LONDON (Reuters) -- England's professional soccer teams, carry- ing with them the get-rich-quick dreams of one adult in every three, open their 65th season Wednesday. Television is keeping fans at home and high government taxes are seriously affecting the game | attendances were down by nearly | 2,000,000 last season--but soccer still reigns as the bigget sport attraction inthe country. About 1,000,000 English, Scots and Welsh fans who love the game for itself will turn out each Saturday for the next 38 weeks to see their favorite team clash for league honors. Away from the stadiums, 10,000. 000 Britons will fervently study the day's results to see whether their average 50-cent weekly stake on the country's soccer pool gamble has won a top prize of $210,000. As Top British Sport All you have to do is complete {a coupon forecasting the outcome |of certain games, usually the most | difficult, by marking "1" for a home win, "2" for an away win and "x" for a draw. It sounds easy but the experts say the "in- vestor" can expect to win $210,000 once in 400.000 years. During the season, 92 eleven-man | combinations meet in England and {Wales in three top leagues--divi- |sion I, II, and III. In November, any team, professional or amateur, bush-league or top division, can en- ter a knockout competition for the Football Association Cup, most coveted honor of the game. A top division team always wins. Scotland, which likes to boast it taught the English how to play the game, has 32 teams organized in divisions "A" and *"'B' and runs its separate cup competition. Nor- thern Ireland also has its own soc- cer organization. LEADERS IN MAJOR LEAGUES By THE CANADIAN PRESS American League AB R H Pct. 466 78 154 .331 420 87 138 .329 437 74 140 .320 375 83 116 .309 329 60 99 .309 Mantle, NY Runs: Minoso, 87. Runs batted in: Rosen 101. Hits: Kenn, Detroit and Vernon, | Fonthill, Ont., shotmaker who took | Pittsburgh ~ 100 000 010 00-- 2 9 0 | 15% {the British Women's Open, again {meets the girl who beat her Sat- | urday in the Canadian Women's Open final at London, Ont. The big field will include eight players (counting Marlene) who have accounted for 13 assorted na- | tional titles. The United States Golf Associa- tion Monday listed 159 entries for the all.match play tournament at the Rhode Island Country Club, Aug. 24-29. upsets at Portland, Ore., the sur- prise winner, Mrs. Jackie Pung of Hawaii, has turned professional. , BILLY PEACOCK WINS BANTAM FIGHT TITLE BROOKLYN (AP) -- Billy Pea- | cock, 20-year-old former amateur, {won the North American bantam- | weight boxing title Monday night | by a 12-round split decision over { Henry (Pappy) Gault of Spartan- {burg, S. C., at the Eastern Park- way Arena. Peacock weighed 117% and Gault 118. The slim, broad-shouldered Ne- gro from Los Angeles, built up an early lead with his stiff right-hand punches to the body. Then he held off a closing surge by Gault, -de- fending his championship for the fifth time. There were no knockdowns al- though Gault slipped momentarily in the third round. Referee Petey Scalzo, former featherweight champion, scored the fight for Peacock 7-41 and judge Art Aidala also found for Peacock 7-5. Judge Charley Short- ell's ballot was for Gault 65-1. Gault won the crown from Fer- [32 Gagnon at Quebec Oct. 27, WRESTLING Tuesilay Night, Oshawa Arena at 8.45 WATSON - Vs, - TOGO In their last bout these two wrestlers drew the largest crowd im Oshawa's history , 3,527! Get your reserved tickets only, @ BOBO BRAZIL -Vs v DON LEO JONATHAN Since last year's tournament of | | Brooklyn 000 000 002 3x-- 5 7 1 Lindell and Sandlock; Podres, | | Milliken (9) Labine (1) and | Walker, Campanella (9). | WP: Labine. | HRs: Brooklyn--Snider, Hodges. | First | Philadelphia 000 100 040-- 5 10 0 {New York 000 000 011-- 2 9 0] | Miller, Konstanty (9) and Lo-| pata; Koslo, Wilhelm (8) Kennedy | (9) and Westrum. | WP: Miller. LP: Koslo. HRs: New York--Thomson, Lock- | man. | Second | Philadelphia 000 000 000-- 0 8 1 New York 000 012 03x-- 6 12 0] Hansen, Konstanty (6) Kipper | (8) and Burgess; Corwin and Westrum. LP: Hansen. HR: New York--Thompson. ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)--Auto- | mobiles registered in the first three | months after April 1 numbered | about 2,000 more than the total registration for last year. At 'the end of July the Newfoundland count was over 18,000 cars and al- most 8,000 commercial vehicles. | waukee, Doubles: Vernon, 34. Triples: Rivera, Chicago, 10. Home runs: Zernial Philadelphia and Rosen, 29, Stolen bases: Rivera, 19 Pitching: Lopat, New York 12-2, 857. . Strikeouts: Pierce, Chicago, 142. National League AB R H Pet. 395 64 134 .339 400 67 133 .333 447 83 148 434 82 143 .330 Irvin, NY Furillo, Bkn Kluszewski, Cin Schoendienst, Stl Campanella, Bkn 393 78 127 .323 Runs: Snider, Brooklyn, Dark, New York, 92. "i batted in: Campanella, 11 Hits: Ashburn, Philadelphia, 151. Doubles: Musial, St. Louis, 38. Triples: - Fondy, Chicago, and Bruton, Milwaukee, 10. Home runs: Mathews, Mil 37. Stolen bases: Bruton, 23. Pitching: Burdette, Milwaukee, 11-2, ,846. : ets; Roberts Philadelphia 'Broda May Have Coaching Post Hearty Aspect | MONTREAL (CP)--Turk Broda, former starry netminder with Tor- onto Maple Leafs, said Monday night he will probably be confirmed "within the next two or three days' as coach of Ottawa Senators of the Quebec Senior Hockey League. "There's nothing absolutely def- inite on it yet, but you might say |it's on the fire," Broda said in an | interview. | "I expect confirmation from | Tommy Gorman within the next {two or three days." Gorman is owner of the Sena- | tors. 'American League 'Opener Oct. 10. | HERSHEY, Pa. (AP--American Hockey League 1953-54 action will burgh, Syracuse and Hershey. | The league's board of governors and | Monday adopted a 70-game sched- |5.2, ule calling for each member to play | the other 14 times, seven at home and seven away. The playoffs will follow final games on March 21, | 1954. | With St. Louis dropping out for the coming season, the AHL will operate with six entries--Cleveland Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Syracuse, Her- shey and Providence. | The openi night has | Cleveland at Pittsburgh, Buffalo at |Syracuse and Providence at Her- | shey. had} furnace. heating expert, N'FURNO fur Check these features--then see your dealer's showroom. new compactness, rubber-mounted. fier keeps the right water level furniture-saving heat. | efficiency of operation. are low-priced. Here's a heating unit for your home that reduces your heating problems to nil--an N'FURNO Designed by a renowned Canadian by Canadians for Canadian heating conditions. New Beauty with N'FURNO's attractive blue Hammerloid finish--easy to clean, too! More Space in your cellar with N'FURNO's New Quietness--ai N'FURNO fans are No Water to put in-- the Bulloch humidi- keeps air at the right humidity for healthy, New Economy with precision-engineered New Low Price-- despite these new better- heating features, N'FURNO FURNACES Your Heating Problems are GONE WHEN YOU HAVE A NEW mia ah ph Koiw ' naces are built N'FURNO at automatically, A) ) RN A FURNACE There's an N'FURNO FURNACE te oe DON LEWIN - VS. FIRPO ZBYZKO yr Reserved Tickets at Casino Restaurant your home perfectly == for coal, DEALERSHIPS oped in cortain territories. Write... HEATING ACCESSORIES LIMITED, 17 Basin Street, Toronto Dick Welker Again Leads I-C Batting (Including Friday night games, based on 100 or more official at | bats) 7 . | " AR R H Pct. RBI | Welker, Kitch. 199 54 69 .347 34 | Steele, Galt 149 33 51 .342 38 |Lawing, Oshawa 195 47 66 .338 43 {Evon, London 211 47 61 .337 40 T. O'Connor, Osh. 179 40 58 .324 2i | Kvasnak, Kitch. = 219 34 68 34 45 | St. Thomas Flick, Waterloo Turke, Oshawa 211 44 66 .313 20 208 27 65 .312 26 - 107 12 33 .308 23 173 38 53 .307 30 123 18 38 .307 11 184 34 56 .304 22 | Runs batted in: Kvasnak, 45, !Lawing 43, Napier 42, Evon 40, Steele 38, Psutka 35, Welker 34, Kaiser 33, Russian 32, Kinney 32, Halkard 30, LeFevre 29. Two base hits: Lawing 14, Le- Fevre 14, Pontorelli 14, Rassmus- sen 13, D'addario 12, Jones 12, Kai- {ser 12, Turowski 12. Three bases: Jones 7, Welker 6, {Kaiser 5, Hodara 5, Dinney 4, Le- Fevre 4, Deakin 4, Lawing 4, Herch 4. Home runs, Steele 13, Cline 11, Napier 9, Kvasnak 8, Evon 7, Jes- sup 7. Stolen bases, Welker 36, Gray |. Mason 12, Boniface 12. Sacrifice hits, Ler 10, McGill- vray 10, Gray 10. | Bases on balls: Jones 58, Law- jing 58, Napier 54, Halkard 50. | PITCHING LEADERS Young, Guelph, 9-2 Parker, Brantford, 7-3 Duncan, Kitchener 11-3 Penny, London, 8-4 Ripplemeyer, Oshawa, 10-4 Hanrahan, Oshawa, 5-2 Ariss, Waterloo, 8-4 Biasatti, Waterloo, 5-1 Strikeouts: Jessup 110, Allan 82, Penny 79, Gavey 77, Grasso 74, Drapcho 67. Somerville Repeats His 1932 Victory MONTREAL (CP) (Sandy) Somerville did it again-- 21 years after he defeated Johnny Goodman of Omaha in the final of the United States amateur golf championship. The "re-enactment" of that fa- mous final in 1932 at Baltimore, came the only Canadian ever to take the U.S. amateur crown, was layed over the Montreal Summer- ea course. It was one of the - liminary special events to the \- 000 open starting Thursday. This time Somerville won with a medal score of 74 against Good- man's 81 over 18 holes. Summer- lea's par is 36-34-70, and Somer- ville went 35-39 for the nines. John | took 41-40. | Gordon B. Taylor of Montreal, |who won the Canadian Amateur | the same year that Somerville took | the U.S. title, was a third member {of the special threesome and | equalled Somerville's score. Yesterday's Stars -- C. Ross | when Sandy won 2 and 1 and be- | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS -331 [begin Saturday, Oct. 10 at Pitts- | Batting--Duke Snider, Brooklyn Dodgers, collected three of Brook- {lyn's seven hits in the Dodgers' | 1l-inning victory over Pitts { burgh, including a ninth-inning | homer that tied the score. Pitching--Bob Kuzava, New York | Yankees, gave up 11 hits but scat- | tered them so we]l he pitched a shutout over Philadelphia A's 9-0. THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, August 18, 1053 18 DEFEAT WITH HONOR? British Walker By STERLING SLAPPEY LONDON (AP)--Eight confident Britons and a couple of cocky | Irishmen with a pleasant, but | seemingly futile, job on their | hands, eave Thursday for the | Walker Cup golf matches in the | United States. | © Their chances of beating the Am- {ericans at Kittansett ub, just | outside Marion, Mass., along Buz- zards bay, are so slim that London bookies break out in a belly laugh when you ask them to quote the odds. "We quit betting on the Walker Cup three matches back and I don't see any sense in quoting odds this year," one of London's favor- ite gamblers said. "The Yanks will win again, never fear. If one of our old customers insists on us making some odds, we might quote bm something like 12-1, or maybe 20-1." The 13th massacre is expected Sept. 4-4. The only time the British won since the Walker Cup inau- v Tony Duncan, ounce of the Welsh Guards, captains the team which flies first to Montreal. The Britons will play in the Can- adian Amateur starting Aug. 24. After that they motor to Kittansett for a week of practice before the big international matches. | After the Walker Cup matches | five members go op to Oklahoma City for the National Sept. 14-19, and five return home. The delegation going to Okhla- St. Catharines, Petes Are In Lacrosse Final By THE CANADIAN PRESS St. Catharines Athletics and Peterborough Trailermen are the finalists for the Eastern Canada | senior lacrosse championship hon- lors, f In the best-of-seven Senior On- tario Lacrosse Association semi- final series, Peterborough defeated {Orillia Terriers 27-7 Monday night (to win the series 4-0. St. Cathar- ines also won its series 4-0 by | downing Fergus Thistles 11-7. | The best-of-seven series will decide the east's representa- tive in the Canadian championship Mann Cup final on the west coast next month will opep in Peterbor- ough Friday. Peterborough were never behind in their game with the Terriers. They led 6-2 at the end of the { first, 12-5 at the half and 20-7 at the®end of the third. Star for the Trailermen was Rusty Slater, who scored six goals. four assists for Peterborough while Amateur, | which | Roger Smith got four goals and | Cup Golf Team Has Pleasant But Hopeless Task +homa City includes Joe Carr, {doubtless the best amateur on the | eastern. side of the Atlantic. Carr | whipped Georgian Harvie Ward for the British Amateur title at Hoy- lake in May. Others going to Oklahoma City are Dunca, northern Ireland's Nor- man, Drew, Scotland's James C. Wilson, and Wales' former profes- sional," John Morgan. Team members skipping the Na- tional Amateur are Gerald Mick- lem, Roy MacGregor, Arthur Per- owne, Ronnie White, and John D. A. Langley. Along with White and Carr, Langley makes up Britain's strongest trio. Langley played on the 1936 Walker Cup team. White is rapidly becoming the mystery man of British golf. He is. a Liverpool lawyer who "'for- gets" to send in his entry forms |for tournaments or finds that bus- |iness is too pressing for golf. He has won five Walker Cup matches, but he hasn't risked that great re- cord against an American in two years. Perowne is a farmer-golfer' who isn't turning out as well as Eng- land expected. Drew is the young- est of the lot--he's only 21. Mick- lem is the oldster at 43. MacGregor is 39. Wilson is well known in | Scotland, but hardly anyplace else. In past Walker Cup matches, present British team members have a poor record of winning {only eight, losing 14 and splitting ! three. three goals were scored by Ross Powless and Harry Wipper. Two goal men were Fitzgerald, O'Hearn Hildebrande and Mason. Don McPhail and Stu Scott scored two apiece for Orillia, with singles going to Jack Kapasky, Tony Damico and Jim McNulty. Athletics had an easy time all ithe way, leading 2-0 at the end of {the first, 50 at half time, and 7-4 | at the end of the third quarter. | Leading the St. Catharines at- tack were Al Frick with three goals and Derry Davies, Jim Mec- Mahon and Skip Teal with two goals each. Doug Smith and John Dewar notched singles. Scorers for Fergus were Don | Gear with three goals, and Harry Kazarian, Bob Dobbie, J. J. Hill {and Elmer Harris with one each, { ' Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Do false teeth drop, slip or wobble | when you talk, eat, laugh or sheeze? | Don't be annoyed and embarrassed by | such handicaps. FASTEETH, an alka- line (non-acid) powder to sprinkle on your plates, keeps false teeth more firmly set) Gives confident feeling' of se- curity and added comfort. No mmy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. 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