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Show f , frse. MOPSY tyGLADYS PARKER He's getting mighty tired of THAT SAME OLD TYPE SHO& n WAVPW'T Vrtll AklV MPW CTVI P?V 1 m r ivxx Home-Town Echoes f iom. coait vou Sjs; 2V.CZE- -'-s-Tjr HEACJ, ("IPS bell ? ? beS2 jfjjTOl 6SY UP, !OHA), THERE ' S2iSJ I TvJfe 111? T UP WW Iff THP f! 1 f THIRD TlMB WIS WEEK Fj tfEBIUMlz'V.r- . l-ISsf 1 ft? HAo-m&sr you V fatowih&" I .1. TH FiBS WILL BB tJ 4R0 OS TH' V rr. " cin-eeB you M p7T VJ MEMOJR3TJ BUT ACW HAD TO CO ALL 60$H,TAKXXATHiSl ISN0DAVT060 I ROWING! B 1 LOOK AT THOSE WAVES! IU6ET 5EA5ICK5 If ALL DEPENDS My friend Urt. H. lives near the Children's home. Recently, when the home youngsters were being taken on picnic, Mrs. H.'i small daughter watched the excited mob piling into a special bus. With a wistful expression, she turned to her mother and sighed: !,wisbt t was an orphant They have the tnostest run!" Equality Andrew Carnegie once was asked by a reporter what he considered most Important In industry: Capital. Capi-tal. Labor or Brains? " With laugh the steel magnate replied: "Which is the most tmpor-tant tmpor-tant leg of a three-legged stool?" Resurrected first G.lMVhat's eating you? Second. GX-0h. nothing much. But when your girl friend said she'd dig tip a date for mebrother, she wasn't kiddingi IV. MS I J T i Mmnwi By C. Kessler HOW CAM OJ GET SEASK?tTSQNLY A LAKES MULTIPLE PERSONALITT The chronic reformer was lecturing lectur-ing the village soak at the barroom bar-room door. "But listen," argued die old soak. "1 ten you one drink Is all 1 ever take. Jus' one if I drink! But that one ttl drink always makes me feel like a new man. An' pretty soon all those new guys line up tor a drink, too!" Better Cse Zippers I went to the closet this morning, morn-ing, reached tor my favorite sport shirt to wear for the first time this season, and it was there aU right But where were its buttons? I asked her what in the world had happened to 'em, and she replied: re-plied: 1 couldn't find any new ones anywhere any-where and those were exactly the shade I needed for my dress. You have enough shirts without that one. anyhow!" l l,U ,1 ...-I "I don't think we onghta ignore 'em any longer . boot time ve paid the check!" NANCY KEy- THAT JAR OF SEEDS BELONGS TQ MY r -vCANARy BIRD 4k MUTT AND JEFF JEFfJ NOW "THAT WEfcE ENGAGED X WISH Vou'd 0 IM AND I MARRY ASK PAPA IF TOO I VOU? Cftlt WlnKKIr Wit? M Nnuf9 1 7 y LITTLE REGGIE HEGTAR FELLERS A business B sa eocb - tVEtt ON SOUP AVENCX)! VIRGIL LOOK, POP- X60T A GOLDSTAR FOR KNOWIN& SUNDAY SCHOOL boot BP! Jk REGGIE HAVE THAT 1 ffl j.LJm' M-i SO3SgS? H Mtt r ih- I "- - 1 I I T 4" .VC.I v I -.LESSONS pST It's VS. NOW! X YES. I KNOW. POHY WEVB KNOWN ENCEE.BUT EACH OTHER jMARRlASE IS FOR A erf A SERIOUS L0N3 f J THlNfl AND YOU WAHT TO MARRyj rit?t rf AK NQYOUK IP'ftl fJ OA OA lO AtMTUFO ME? SO SERIOOS THING! Pitt Ik 1HENtU.BXDUIM fcSA 1 1 1 III wkih SQHtLStaai imMlXA HOMERODIEJOE. CTHAT'S PlNEf PRANKIE AH RA&&IT R9 8C0 "If be wants a ride you'd better give it to him. Bis uncle carries a lot of weight in this precinct!" OH.SURL' iFTrtAT'STHBK BOTTHEM WAY VOUFEEL IFEEUNSSTOWARDS :1 XWOOLDNt HAVE ANY PLACE TO OUR ENSAGeMEKTJ vH. 1 ME 'BACK IS BROKEN.' My BUT EVENINGS MY FEELINGS I dYmI I JUST THE SAME ANYMORE? HOT By Ernie Bushmlller OH, WELL THE p W0US1NQ SITUATION ALL OVER St By Bud Fisher HUW HERi4..j HAVE CHANGED I v SHE FEELS By Margarita By Arthur Pointer By Gene Byrne 0 N4ELS 1 jbr IP YOU would think that Tom Yaw key. owner of the Boston Bed Sox. after spending so many millions and waiting so many years to win a pennant, would now be a happy carefree man. from what we hear Yawkey, usually a cool, calm individual individu-al in the face of any crisis, is now nervous as a cat on a hot stove. His team has shown no sign of the jitters, but Owner Yawkey has. He apparently Joe Cronin can't believe that his dream has a most excellent chance of coming true. As a high-class sportsman in every ev-ery way and a real lover of baseball, base-ball, winning a major league pen-nant pen-nant became one of Yawkey's obsessions ob-sessions years ago. Money was never nev-er a barrier along the pennant road. It is estimated that the Red Sox owner has unloaded over $3,000,000 for the exclusive purpose of finishing finish-ing in front The amount may be considerably higher. But his pennant pen-nant dream kept turning into a nightmare. Something always hap-pened hap-pened and it was usually to the Yankees. In the meanwhile Yawkey refused re-fused to weaken, much less to quit Be also stuck to his manager Joe Cronin, where the Bed Sox, trader average baseball ownership, would have known four or five different managers in the last few years. While it was known early this spring that the Bed Sox would be good, the Yankees and the Tigers were also in the pennant-race picture. pic-ture. The Yankees with Joe Dl-Maggio, Dl-Maggio, Charlie Keller, Tommy Benrich, Joe Gordon, Phil Ruzzuto, Snuffy Stirnweiss, Bill Dickey, Nick Etten, Johnny Lindell and Spud Chandler shaped up as a formidable formida-ble looking outfit on both attack and defense. The Tigers, too, looked dangerous. Many Uncertainties The Bed Sox at the time had several sev-eral gambles to face; at first at third, and their pitching staff. They had Tex Hughson and Boo Ferris, but the others were uncertainties, uncertain-ties, just as Yankee pitchers were outside of Chandler. You can understand, un-derstand, during those March days at Sarasota, on the west coast of Florida, why Tom Yawkey should have been a trifle on the jittery side. Tom was but Joe Cronin wasn't although Joe knew this had to be his year. Cronin refused to make any predictions beyond saying this: "We've got a good ball club. We'll give anybody a battle." Now past the midsummer spot with a long lead and the best bap club, you would feel that Tom Yawkey Yaw-key at least should be able to take a deep, free breath and relax. baseball's greatest year, so far as attendance and public interest goes, with something elose to an ail-star ail-star team in one corraL every one connected with the Bed Sox should be able to stand up and sing "Just around the corner there's a rainbow rain-bow in the sky," or "Happy days are here again." Ail of Boston, outside of the Yawkey Yaw-key office, are humming these cheerful tunes. After all Boston, one of the cradles of baseball, has gone 28 years without a pennant Boston kept looking back these 28 years to the days of Long, Lowe and Tenney, Kid Nichols, Hugh Duffy, Big Bill Dineen, Smoky Joe Wood, Carrigan, Speaker, George ("Duffy") Lewis, Hooper, Including George Stallings' miracle Braves of 1914. Boston also could look back to a burly fellow by the name of Babe Ruth and a great squad that Harry Frazee sold to New York to make the Yankees famous. It was Boston Bos-ton that gave New York its Yankee fame Ruth, Pennock, Jumping Joe Dugan, Red Ruffing, these and many more. But Babe Ruth was enough. For 10 years the Yankees without Babe Ruth in his prime, would have been Just another ball club. A good one but not a great one. Would Have Kept Stars U Tom Yawkey had been owner of the Red Sox around isio icon Boston would have tfominataii a,l game through the next decade, not me x emcees. For Yawkey would have kept Ed Barrow, one of the smartest men baseball has ever known. He would have kept Babe Ruth, Red Ruffing and Pennock and many others and to fheaa h ami list have added the best ball players a tew millions ox dollars could buy. This shOWB VOU what' an mm. means to a major league club. Harry Frazee. a theatric! baseball man. wrecked i p4 c. for at least 10 years. It has taken om xawxey anomer 10 years to sweep away the debris and replace the damage. He faced an almost impossible fob with th v.u... ! - - "" MMW CUP trencnea as they were largely through Red Sox talent an those years. From this you can understand under-stand whv Tom awt an v. i date city of Boston is so wrought yrospeci ox getting a long-delayed fevenge over the Yankees, wl robbed them of vie. Pegged Lawn BencK IsEasilyDismanllej pterin four secUtS tog the pegs. All 0f th. pieces of furniture in tto. 2? are made m the same rnl ' !$!&5ture 5557?i WW BE STORED FLAT afiSyfl a SEVERAL "F0R ORTHESB oKSSS J make fiTPRTi2i a ions ssSa9LJ5. cX ! The construction la so 8imole(W.ti need is stock widths of KM"! saw. a screw driver and 1 1 brSilJM to bore the holes for the ieB" Pattern 294 tor the bench- n m ... tables in two sizes; No re 15c each postpaid, or aB Xl one address for 35c Patterns A cutting diagrams of all H fc directions and a complSeW' terials. Send orders direct to " MRS. BOTH WYETH SPEAEI Bedford Hills, N. Y. Druwi Enclose IS cents tor Pattern No. SI Ma"" CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT ATJTOS, TRUCKS & ACCESS. HOMES ON WHEELS few end ised Home Trtilut SO Saetoir Built Model to ChooN tm .. . . 714 South Main Salt take City, Utah Phone 47701 BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR, Concrete Block Machines Fait, hand operated $70 complete. 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