~ths first ables stsgowiil be played for ‘ . firmly chop a f‘ 11:14am? ‘V: ' ‘I . THE i rs .1 / ACTUAL SCENES OF AT COURCELETTE AND 1918-17. Also Orchestra MATINEE a mom‘ 1 AND us. Hagen Leads Field At Toronto (Canadian Press) ROSEDALE GOLF CLUB, Toron- to, July 27.—DC1)0I18.lf' Walter H118- drove en, British golf champion. his methodical, calculating way o er the rain-soaked Rosedale Course this afternoon in 70 strok to head the field at. the conclusion of the day's play in the Canadian Golf championship with a scar; of rs half oi the 72-hole competition cut down the number of 1111111111915 — those 20 strokes or less behind the 166 who started Thursday will tee of! tomorrow in the final 36 holes of 189. Hi8 1188118511! for the leader-so that only 70 of the _ play. _ YACHT RABE The first "ca ‘m, the Charlotte, eleven rounds; any other heavy- Yacht-Club Cup W111 like D11“ this afternoon on the Course and time allowance to b announced at starting point. tretircd to his dressing room a The following is the schedule u! 3°39“ d d M n ‘ racing for the balance oi’ the sezl- h“ are an ores a en pace son. C. Y. C. CUP 1st. Race-July 28th. 2nd. Race-August 4th. 3rd. Race-August 11th. 4th Itaoe_1\ugust 18th. ltfll. J. O. IIYNDMAN CUP . slat. Race-August 25th. 2nd Race-Geptember lst. ‘3rd Raco-Septcmber 8th. 4th Race-September 15th. CONFBDIIATION CUP Labor Day, September 3rd. st 2 m. p. ..2mtponsd races in any of the above schedule to be raced on the foilooing Wodntday evening at 6 p. m. Any special races will be held on wean-day evenings throughout the season. G'0LF' Today Saturday. July 28th, at 2.30 st the Cit-slot Golf 1-1111"- stags of the Wellner ,1 ‘mine. played. s1 play, handl- lllelfi l paints, five points to winner, four point for secong. ‘three P051118 s" thir DUB. °1' W" - 1‘ iimdpomolfor fifth. Where ties re- sult players will be credited wi'h points won. At the conclusion of the serial. player hsvins the m‘ point wins. Bed sun: wlllppoq) [rash for in iirciuiu sv . Prise: rllwilw Mon . CANADIAN LEGION PRESENTS BRITAIN'S ANSWER T0 “THE BIG PARADE” OTHING LIKE Ir EVER BEFOR BRITAIN'S‘ GIGANTIC Flilti Evie) I - “TI-IE “m”, ./ aridtdmrhumar rides Golf unholy before the New Zcsiander did. . him-the way many another good , fense and defence-and will tell the THE CHABfiOTTBYJPOWN GUARDHN JULY 28', 1928 laws At Home And. Abroad- IN ms oneness ‘rrcrugu, “LAUGH CLOWN LAUGH” day for 4 my —- COMEDY AND n£s.MAv CAPITOL Mon. . i “Guni~§llospel”"Also¥Se1-ial and Comedy GENE iliillii‘ ill ;ilgllgssgggl_lil”llllilsili- ill0iliil0 10010250000 ill illzlli‘ lCAPlTOL TODAY 3.00—7.00—8.45 NARD in 1,4 J 1. A Sweet Love Romance- Packed with fun, many thrills, much mystification, with two rare beauties and plenty o! JOY- ‘ hat's “Nobody's Widow." t A delightful comedy or ' wedded life and social in- ' trlgue vibrant with heart f sppeal- l THE 11011111581 FIGHT 0F > .. JACK IIEMPSEYS CAREER Ring. -- In view of the recent Tunney- lleeney bat ‘JailkgDempsey 1111-5 name is o Jack rec caption from! ‘ huge crowd Thurs- ney. . The following reproduced from n Guardian file of 1924 and written fight with Firpo Pampas" in September 1923. By ROBERT EDGREN S P E I5 I A L Vaudeville Skit ON THE STAGE UNDER. CAPABLE DI- RECTION AND WITH A SPLENDID LOCAL CAST IMPERIAL ‘ AQMY MUSEUM OUR CANADIAN OTHER. POINTS l l- m? r — Our Gang C0medy—Prologue P. M. CHILDREN 26c. ADULTS 37c. CHILDREN 26c. -- ORCHESTRA. 500. sfiilfiliii By “Teen BOYS m THE mos-rump rasuciiss. DURING THE IIIJGE OFFENSIVE or nALcoisv 37c. UMMENT 1 American Today's Yacht Race v- The Charlottetown Yacht Club will stage a race on the bay this af- ternoon at 2 o'clock. There will be four or more yachts face the start-i el-‘s gun and wtih the help of‘ a, gocd breeze a rather exciting after-f test. noon’s sport is promised. ,‘ Tom Heeney, ‘lnever been counted out. es 16 by decision. Fourteen were No Match For Tunney Tbouts. Phil Scott took a 20-rou courage and stamina failed to wind for him anything more than a sor- ry showing against Gene Tunney,l the clever. dancing ‘and wily cham- pion. All Heeney showed was gameness and ability to absorb pun- ishment. It was his almost super-‘ human courage that made him last: B. Miller was declared winner on and Paclino won in 10 rounds 1927. . _ _ Heeney has fought 33 bouts as professional, winning 10 by knoc four times. e weight would have gone down long e Tunney left the ring unmarked and unhurt. while his scrappy op- given a shock yesterday when in umanity. from start to finish. and had Tun- ney the same kick in his right hand that Jack Dempsey possess ‘- in his hey-day. there is no telling what may have happened at the Yankee Stadium Thursday night. At the present time it looks as if Tunney will retire an unbeaten champion. If he doesn't it will be old age that will take the title from Canadian record. Pickard is likel tition. in the Javelin, has been outthrow title holder has gone before. Jack Shel-key will once again have a chance to wag his mouth and pick the flaws in lleeney's of- practice, and Sweden has been fav world. no doubt, just how he could have licked Tunney. 1 But there is one thing in the tell- ing, and another in the doing. If Bharkey ever climbs through the ropes for a battle with Tunney, he won't last half the distance I-Ieeney did; Jack Dempsey demonstrated that point to a nicety. So far as Risko, the Cleveland baker boy is ccncemcd, it would be only laugh- dbl: to match him with the Marine In ‘the first place Risko does not know enough about boxing to even give Tunney an interesting time, and in the second place he could not take it the way Dempsey and Ileeney did. ‘ Apart from these there are quite a number of "l-Iorimntal Hanni- gans" hanging around that would be willing to take a pasting for a mere consideration of ll00.000.00- who wouldn't. but this is not fair to the fans or Tunney either. To date there isn't a throat of any kind on the rosy firmament that could take the champion‘s IIICBSUTc. It. looks as if the old man with the scythe will be in on the killing before anvbody else comes along. Gene Tunney has never been ocked out. The late Harry Greb Olympics. this year than at any time since she took to the spiked shoes. As expected Joe Wright, Jr., Dia- mond Sculls winner. has been chos- en over Jack ‘Guest to represent Canada in the singles event at. the Olympic regatta. Wright repeatedly outrowed Guest in trials-tale. by not any great margin-but by en- ough to convince Manager Tommy Loudon, of the Osrsmen, and Choir- man P. J. Mulqueen; of the Canad- ian Olympic Committee. that he is the logical man to compete against Pearce, the Australisnrltfyers 0' the United States; Oollett. whom h" defeated at the English Henley. and others. Pearce appears to be the man most feared by the Wright Party. but'they were not worrying. Wright and Guest rowed 1000 met- res yesterday in the excellent time of 3.36 snd Wright led his doubles » nib-EM- lllglds the only decision the marine has lost in the ring professional. In 1922 Greb won the light-heavyweight title tfrom Tunney over the fifteen-round route. l Tunney has engaged in 62 bouts. scoring 30 knockouts and winning decision bouts and a match with Jack Renault was declared no con- like Tunney, has The rug- fged New Zenlander has lost three Tom I-leeney‘s bull-dog tenacityldecision in London two years ago, foul in Capetown, Africa. in 1924, ’lii.S and 17 by points. He has drawn Canadian athletes may surprise the world in the coming Olympic ‘games at Amsterdam. Anyway, the lUnited States representatives were ofltrial Vic Pickard cleared the bar in It was an uneven fightlthe pole vault at 13 feet 6 inches That is a foot higher than his vault in the final trials at Hamilton last month and,5 3-4 inches above the to do even better in actual compe- Then Dorval Filling. of Cardston, Alberta, who will represent Canada ing the Swedish stars by ten feet in ored to win this event with ease. Other Canadian athletes are also making an impressive showing in practice, and this year's team may turn out the largest. point winner that Canada has ever sent. to the United States Olympic coaches have every reason to fear Myrtle Cook in the sprint events. The Tor- onto giri is at the height of her] athletic career and running faster WITH CHARLES RAY Comedy ' PHYLLIS H111 V E R ALSO "LEAVE THEM LAUGHING" & "Yes," said Jack Dempsey, "Y0" can say the Firpo fight was my hardest. But use 5/0111 0WD 111d!- ment. They're all hard when the other fellow manages to pop Y0" on the button. out for n tcn count, the way Carl Morris did at New Orleans. Some- times you hit the other fellow and think its all over, and then he lands on you like a ton of coal tossed off a skyscraper in a piano case. That's what.‘ makes fighting tough. "You never know what will hap- pen till they ring the lust gong. "There was that fight at Toledo when I won the championship. In the second round poor Jess Willard was a sight. He was all beaten up like un egg and he wouldn't quit. but I'd have to finish him, when I saw his right arm (roming up slow- ly, like the walking beam on a fer- ryborit engine. I didn't. even take the trouble to dodge. "That. big glove landed on my chin and nearly took my head oil‘. It. was the heaviest punch I ever felt. Like running into the edge of a big oak door in the dark. For about ten llllll ill FASLHA 1'10 Straight Heats. nd a, McKlyu, 2.01 Mooseleuk Club of Presque Isle in Maine, won the free for all feature s“ there and “"311 M "W591i- og me concluding ‘my Q1- me new (Special to the Guardian) There was a lot. of fighting in those! a emu,“ Exhibition. miwsummer AMSTERDAM, July 2'1. - Joe pictures that I didn't know anything k- races yesm-day_ scoring a cleamcut Wright has been accorded the hoh- about. It was like some other guy and New Brunswick circuit season gvgqen she paced the second heat in It was the first race Bessie Mc- Klyo has ever won on the Frederic- ton track to turn the trick she beat Guesswork by two eyelash fln- ishes in the first two heats, Caruso being the contender in the third round when Will Flemming decided he couldn't catch the pacing Queen of Aroostooks potato belt. There was considerable difilculty with scoring in the second» heatof the free for all, but in all three heats the contenders got away on even terms and their ace was clean] contested and hard fought. -‘ 'i..' Ill i. WINNER I-‘AVORED B. Y Bessie McKlyo was a l0 to 9 fav- orite against thmfield-with- six star- ters in the race. but Margaret Onst- tan. owned by William Mahoney, of Hyde ParkpMasss was. the ._only other favorite to win. She took- the 2.18 trot and pace in straight heats, but. had to step the first heat in Warren the Gileathwhich was she contender in each heat. The 2.13 pace provided a big up- set when Betty mtrectuowned by E. P. Piper, of Belfast, ‘Maine, won af- lter Jackson Grattan. 2.01 1'25‘ the | lly pulled away from the United States representative. The Argon- aut eight. and Wright and Guest in the doubles, covered halfihe course in 3.15, considered "by critics who h witnessed" the trial. remarkable time. ' ' .- _..._ Reflect Defence’! Tom Heeney said he had perfect- ed s‘ defence for everything that Gene Tunney could throw at him. What did ‘Dom mean by "throw." Tunney threw enough her at. his face and bodv to make shoes for all the poor children in New York- a PHESUUE l5 l E E5 6E0. Maine Horse Scores Clean-cut Victory in FREDERICTON, July 27.—Bessie 1-4. entry of the en was given‘ the heat. showed lameness and Major Mozart. talked 11' 0V"- flnfl I 101d you how I took the second heat when Blue Jay 8119M 8- 00111919 01' 1101118 WHY d!!!’ broke on the first tum and the Ma- jor won ‘the third heat comfortab- ly. Thefliifnior free for all unfinish- ed by winner 10g 1.3 w win flwjfgg-hugjmm ing heat of the 2.24 pace. as did Friscotanna in the 2.21 trot. iudges‘ decision regarding the third heat. ‘of the ‘Z310 trot and pace raced on Wednesday carried s suspension of 30 days and a fine of $50 for Driver Harry A. Nevers for improp- er conduct_durlng the heat and as- saulting Driver Lee after‘ the heat and Driver‘ Lee was fined £25 for improper driving. ed Nevers behind Kazofi and won in a furious drive over Peter Tanlac The Rabbit. which hsd been favor- ed to win. showing lameness. and heat. of the. free for all indav. ' gem-m- R. M. Webber fined Driv- ers Iflemminv and Channelle 5"‘ each for scoring ahead of the pole horse. are to ship from here to Moncion on Saturday. Canadian Demand Granted l I (Special to the Guardian) 1 l ling a. protetst over privileges accorded the speci runners were today allowed to wol in the main stadium. S lGcorge McLnren Brown has been lpointed to the International Olym- pic committee. Soccer and tennis have been dropped from the Olym- fllC programme. Wright Will Lead victory 1n Sufism heats and ma,“ orof carrying the Canadian standard 1x18 the fastest time of the Maine leading Camadrs “th1ew5int°m°r' row's official opening of the 1928 Olympiad. Chairman Mulqueen an nounced that the privilege esteem for his victory in the Din stadium. nished a surprise. with Jack Bill Shsren agreement with Ruby P., the hd Eula 1-1., won the decid- The In the decidins eat today Driver Raymond replac- During the scoring for the sco- The circuit campaigning stables , To take the wlor entirely out of cotton dress after it has become and the New Zealand challeniters partner at the finish by three Isn- forinergths. Pearce and mm also rowed sl athe course and the Australian eas- .*,_,. .. - l- the 0010.199 Tom WM Iollilllilhollii. ,_ _. 4 ., . defence was Just M! l-I pounds ofl bone and slncw. Perhaps this is 1y‘ . - 1 ~' "i-zilli, 21.11 1'1 lr- ll '11‘. .l' v-liliilrili ' '11 l: somewhat faded. boil the dress in cream of tartar water. A perfect- AMSTERDAM, July 27. - Follow- 111 admit Luis handed inc the marble to the Uniwd States Olympic team the Canadian Canada's Athletes had been given to Wright. as a mark ul mond Sculls. The athletes paraded this evening in a rehearsal at the Houlton pacer, had taken the first heat in 2.10. The 2.14 trot also fur- Peter Mozart, owned by P.__E. Abbott of Portland. Maine, winning when the cxpeetat- » lon had been that either Blue Jay _ or Bill Shawn would win. Blue Jay me may n’ 5mm! m 89¢ 80°11 W911i" won the first heat in 2:11 but was "mm "Y “me I set back to last. place on report of a ‘nher bat“?- patrol’ Judge that he had interfered n Dempsey, and Bill 8har-|°"- ‘m? all’ 11D seconds I was so bad Jess could have knocked me for a loop if he'd had “anything left. Oi course, he was too far gone. “This Firpo fight, now-if coming I was just thinking it was tough“ Memorable Battle In Sept. 1923, When _ Luis F‘irpo,N early T0ppl6d_ F o r m e r . Champion FromHis Thrones-The Most Sensational Fig-ht In History 0f The 4 falo gun. l‘ "My plans were all made. Iin- '~ ' hand again crop tp the fore and his tended to watch Firms 118m e1] llltongue in the land.:iike a hawk-watch his left flan? g y. gp even greater re-‘too. I was going t0 mover £8811: “lehgn- d 1 hi; g g’ ‘did Tunney or Hee- he'd missed me a few times and was fly n8 h n‘ floundering and leaving 8 800111- clean opening you could toss a flow- i *1? t: special fofthis paper. may provekbutton! Doc Kearns had t_ ur interesting reading, This is Jack I cculdnt miss getting him in the Dempsefs version of his memorablefirst round if I didnt slip on a bu- the “Bun 9f the nana peel and break my leg, and and make him miss. er pot through—sock? right you know how Doc picks ‘em. , “I got up there in the ring, and the crowd didn't bother me half as much as two waiters at my table during lunch. I was getting used to look- ing over at Firpo and wondering ‘whether he'd rush me at the start lor wait for me to come to him when The only easy I began to notice something. I didn't fight is where you walk out and let 891/ 1t fit 315%. T1191? “"15 9- 111'- ‘J1 one punch go and the bird in front-Yelling 11nd 0118911118 011d ‘ o; you mm the no,” and sgregcheslnoises and telegraph instructions sort oi’ thing, lcrowds. I was sitting there going mill‘ all that some as usual. crowd Rickard 12101116?‘ 0 Radio And High - _ l Tax For Loss (Special to The Guardian) NEW YORK. N. Y., July 27,4“ Richard's loss on the Tunney-Been. ey fight was announced by the pro. moter today at $l65.'719.77. Rickard attributed the financial failure of the bout to the radio and high fed. eral tax. "This is the last big £13m; will stage and permit the rlldio at the ringside unless they pay n hand. some royalty," he said. "My contract witil radio people expires soon and 1 will not renew it unless they m willing to pay high for the privil. ege." YANKEE STADIUM, New York, July TIL-The crowd in attendance at the bigflght tonight estimated in excess of 50,000 with gate receipts approximately $750,000 was the smallest/to witness n. world's heavy. weight championship bout since the fiasco of Shelby, five years ago when {lack Dempsey ruined the banks m hat boom town by defeating Tum. my Gibbons. If the estimated gim- receipts are correct promoter TEX Rickard and his six hundred mil. lionaires suffered a loss in the neighborhood of $250,000. Tunney was guaranteed the rich purse of $525,000 with $100,000 going to lies- ney. __..__i________ Doc Kearns. Only once f saw a fillt, white face. kind oi hazy, through the ropes, and I knew that was Doc, but I couldn't get any message ov- er. And then I was fighting llgilln. "I don't remember when Hrpo knocked mc down the second time. I remember I felt the ropes against my back, and I was ducking punch- cs, and lknew Firpo was throwing them at me, but the fog was so thick I couldn't see him. The Jog, oi course, was just local you might say. I got that way from being sock- ed. But .1 guess Luis Angel wasn't much better off. "I didn't feel tho punch tllilt knocked me out of‘ the ring. lt mlist have been half a push, for if I'll been hit right with a snappy blow I'd never have been able to climb back. I felt the back of my lleiill hit something. Luckily, it wasn't a typewriter. "Then the fog turned black llnd ii big yellow glow came through it. like the sun rising over a mountain ridge and shinging down into -. deep canyon. Then two black lines came across the sun, and all of il sudden I knew they were the ropoi ‘and thc sun was the overhead pictl 1 within an eyelash of being knockedi J-Au; DEMpgEy out of a title worth a couple of mil-l licn dollars makes a fight llui-d. I'll lined- chocolate drops. "Did you know I was out in that fight. by the first Well. I was. That is, my head was knocked out, my legs Weren't! They're all that saved me. The old‘ bean was out for maybe half a min- lli-e. and the old urnls kept work- ing instinctively, until Luis wns on the fioor. “The first ‘thing 1 remember after that punch is Luis rolling over and me hunting a corner. I looked m: 111C Dictures next day and I had to knocked‘ k punch?! ii‘ “shims-some suy who looked likel me-my double. 1 "I did two’ months‘ road work be- - fore I met Fil-po. If Firpo had done two months of road work. the - championship of the world. were both down a few times. legs bounced me right up again] Firpds legs didn't have any bounce in them. He got up slowly. I could move half across the ring to get at him before he was set to hit. "That. was the main difference between us, although. of course, ere wereoiiher‘ things. My good: less saved me the title. and believe ever train for an- s “You remember." Dempsey went lat Baratoga before the fight when we sat down and i-hinilnk up everything that could Possibly happen and figuring what to do if it did happen? I must have had all that stored in my sub- conscious mind, where it wasn't knocked out of me. and that's what won the fight. “My plans worked out even when I didn't know what I was doing. Down inside me something was pushing the right buttons just the way I'd planned to push them if Firm happened to land on me and knock-me woozy. It was that and my legs. "l train the same way for evcry fight. whether I'm going to meet a c ampion m? a dub. I did two months of road work for Firpo. When I'm knocked out some day it isn‘t going to be because I wasn't in shape. The other fellow is going to be better than I am, that's all. "What you want is my mental picture of my hardest fight. Is that| it? Well I'll tell you; it isn't much of a picture. The beginning is clear and the end is lear, but the middl is just a fog. gefore the fight, in theI aftcrnoon, I-was down along River- side Drive, ia New York City, play- I th til whim dross results. l'1l;."-"l'. l.li.i~‘l >-.--"\ l. l .>~.. the fight than I would have been t over shootdng a squirrel with a buf- ropes to ing on the grass with a lot. of kids. go .1 wasn't any more» nervous abouts ill» l "Tllell, all of a sudden, it struck lmc. I wasn't being razzed. Nobody at. all razzed me. Nobody in all that crowd! They weren't yelling at mo; they were yelling for me. For the ' first time since Toledo I had all the crowd with mu. Not like Jersey City, where c. lot of people wanted the me dead, or Shelby, where I half expected some Frenchman to knock nut to take u shot at lnc. "Then Joe l-lumpllreys gave me that fine instruction, and the crowd yelled so all I could hear was the uir shaking, like being under Niag- ura Falls. Then I got it. I wasn't only Jack Dempsey fighting for a lot of money. I was an American defending n title and I had to make good. "Funny, that cheer nearly got me licked. If I'd been razzed, being used to that. Firpos softest spot and figured how to sock ‘ sock. [started toward lne, slowly. I wiunmad I fe maybe. two steps from Luis when Iiback “m, 21y arms and hooked mm his body 1e,“ a good one that Jarred my 511011111111‘- like a barn doo edge of his ribs bordering the old solar plexus Fitz surest knockout them on the law and "P and crown you. but hit 'em in the pit of the stomach, right, and they stay where they Shoestrillss up into a left somewhere. I ficor and kind didn't slip the first time knocked down. That's where Y°11 1111/ head was knocked out and my legs weren't. I saw in the pict- Iures afterwards that I bounced up against him and went on ing nt all-—a blank. M" smmflhl 911d P0111118 on his back and on his hand d i; different a an "ma" pinning he first I'd have gone out thinking of nothing but Jack Demp- kind I did‘ he might have won the-r-Zigyrsnglml private interests and how W15 times and Mire Firpo miss n. couple of leave the opening I want- “1 leaned over and looked for] him them’ with the first The bell rang. Plrpo gdi; up and aw his arm raised too high "and wide open—a mark- 1‘. I could setfthe spot there is. Hit they may get a 8 I1 drop. "I 11111111911 111 w Bet Firpo before he could lower his guard, "I threw everything from my hook. "I missed. "501116911118 smacked me. from felt my knees hit the .. of bounce. No. I I W38 I told fighting. remember is nothing-just noifh-v "Next I knew I was looking through a thick fog fmd Firpo was‘ on the fioor. I can't remember how‘ many times he went down-seven. 9)’ say-hut I knew it was more an once, because I saw him on pictures-through th f , "l heard the referee telling fnsotao 1° my corner, and the ring was around so fast I'd dive for corner I saw and grab the "8911? 111N011. and look for Give us your picture ond round. you know.” l KEEP HANDY pii-u-i lil LUIS FIRPO ure lights, and the big black blur that moved between me and thB sun was Firpo looking down on me. and I'd been knocked out. of the rill! and had to hustle fast to set 11W‘ there in time to win. "Su I grabbed something M111 h the ropes A1111 d) New I forgot my plans and d _ scrambled throug _ cided to make good for that chegr “way while Flrpo was punching M llby knocking Firpo out with thefirst ‘punch. The first punch! Get that! me. My head was clearing and the fog half lifted. but him plainly. coming, slow, slow and thought 1 was swaying, fast-and clever. get11118 away from them but he kept 1111511‘ ing me hack and I couldn't stop 111111 stand against him. That made mt I couldn't B96 I saw his punches the strength coming I drop something there, becall-‘w the next thing I remember I had s11 awful whiff of smelling salts that nearly took the top off my head- nd half jumped out of my chair nd found I was sitting in my 001'- er. Doc Kearns was talking to m8- “'Your’re slipping, Jack; you" slipping. Go get him." Doc said. ‘So I knew something serious must have happened, to worry D00- Then my head was clear and it W" Just like starting the That ends the story." fight nam- Well, go on," I said to Dempsél" of the I06’ round. There was a second "on. that." said Dempsey 101111" ferently. "I lust want bsck t0 111i’ original plan; made him miss. 811d knocked him out. done it the first time." 1 ought to hi" ‘Keep a bottle of mill-slim hm“ It is a universal remedy. "JARUS 0* iMfit 1'