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Show Shirtwaister for Year-Round Wear ON YOUR PANTRY SHELF WW (ill ie 3.1 m m 1493 CLASSIC shirtwaist style that'i beloved by every age. Here'i a dress that makes up handsomely in almost any fabric, and is a favorite fa-vorite the year 'round. Set-in belt fits snug and neat, gored skirt is simple to put together. Pattern No. 1493 come! In sizes It, 16, la, 20; 40, 42, 44 and 48. Size 18 requires 3 yards of 35-lnch fabric. end today far year sopy of tho latest Ins a of FASHION. Tho Fall and Winter estates, baa a wealth of Ideas for tho home sewer e eclally designed fashions, tips ea wardrobe plannlne. beaaty and basse making seetleao. Prise M eents. Due to an unusually large demand and current conditions, slightly mors time la required In filling orders for a few of the moat popular pattern numbers. Send your order to: SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. TO Minion St.. Baa Frsnclico, Calif. Enclose 29 cents la coins for each pattern desired. Pattern Na. Site Name- Address- Gas on Stomach RaUevod la S annates sr doable yew noway back Wntn oxease tomseb arid oaoaao palnfal, oaf foeae Ins saa. Boor .tomeoa aau heartburn, sectors eaoaily Braeanbe tho feata-actine; Bwltdnao fenowa fur nraplamatla rahaf aMdkioee Ilka thoeeln llaU-eia Tahlala. Neiaietlre. Hall-ana brings eoufort la a Jl(( or doubla your awnajr bask eo return of bottle to as. m at ail drauriaia. This Home-Mixed Syrup Relieves Coughs Quickly Needs No Cooking. Saved Money. Tha surprise) of your life is waiting for you, in your own kitchen, when It cornea to the relief of coughs due to colds. In Just a moment, you can mis a cough syrup that gives you about 4 times as much for your money, aad Is surprising for quick results. Make a syrup by stirring cups of granulated sugar And one cup of water a few moments, until dissolved. No cocking needed It's no trouble at all. Or you can usa corn syrup or liquid honey, Instead of sugar syrup. Then put 1 ounces of l'inex (obtained (ob-tained from any druggist) Into a pint bottle. Pill up with your syrup, and you have a full pint of really wonder, ful cough medicine. It never spoils, lasts a long time, and children love It, This home mixture takes light hold of a cough In a way that means bus-tness. bus-tness. It loosens tha phlegm, soothes the Irritated membranes, and quickly arcs soreness and difficult breathing. Plnex is a special compound of proven Ingredients, In concentrated form, well known for quick action In coughs and bronchial Irritations. Money refunded If It doesnt pl you In avery way. aTHTi- 1, .Ha.: tint mint Inhale the rich, irominc yuaianr "" OR. a 5CHIFP-leraTeifVT 5CHIFP-leraTeifVT MANN S ASTHMA DOR IIEATIHINT ihi nrn time you have tn amdi ef bronchial asthma. ASTHMADOR aifnpiut-can; to use-no-hut n take SMernslly s dependable, effective irtaimtnt diet brlra relieve the agony of the aittck-, sals diamatd breadline. Sold by draijtim eseiywhirs under our mooy back guataiuee .three cftmeniem form.' ASTHMADOR Boarder, ciaatenas or pipe enntuie. P" ' I w.f....-.-.'-.:.. I BUY YOUR EXTRA SAVINGS BONDS NOW SECURITY! 14-44 0s tit a -i t - mwwi " 11 f K!l'lTTa L-a-ta- J ,' - i, U. "SLU UK erM CASH IN rtATMtBSTX" J wmmam IT IS my belief that after 1946. Army and Navy will fade out of the football picture, ai far as winners win-ners are concerned. Sure, they had all the best of It in 1944 and 1945. But 1946 will be different, as Navy already has found out and Army Is finding out. It must be admitted admit-ted that Army and Navy bad the breaks in the two war years of 1944 and 1945. But when ended, it K fwU w atorv. ' r '''-iJ'it the war was a new aiory. - ,r ' ' . s After 1946 every is .! .a tel one knows Army orantland Rice nny Navy won't have a chance against the inducements induce-ments offered all over the map. Army and Navy can't match these lures. By inducements I mean some thing more than scholarships. I mean direct pay, which may range from $5,000 to $10,000 a season, mora or less. This is important to the poorer kids who seem to make the better football players. Star football players no longer are going to schools where there la strict discipline and no financial help. They are an Integral part of the Untied States the cash comes first. This applies to both coaches and players. Unfortunately, the world-wrecking world-wrecking war also tore a heavy gash into sportsmanship, the old Idea of a "fair Held and no favor, may the best man win." Sportsmanship is now a word you find in the dictionary. FoothalVs Top Target When you've piled up a long string of consecutive victories over a period peri-od of two and a half seasons, you know what you are In football. You are the top target of the year, the one they all want to knock over, especially the one who will get there first with the blackjack or the club. Week after week, they were all after Army. First it was Villa-nova, Villa-nova, then Oklahoma, Cornell and Michigan. Then came Columbia, Duke, West Virginia and the crucial cru-cial test with Notre Dame. Pennsylvania Penn-sylvania and the Navy clash will end the fray. Most of the others run two, three and four deep. Army runs less than two deep. Notre Dame runs deeper deep-er than all the others, three and four deep. But they still can play only II men at a time. This is something of a fallacy in this modern game, where they wear out quicker than they ever did In the old days. Maybe May-be the pace is faster. Maybe they are not as rugged as they used to be. Who knows? Army's Red Blaik, a fine coach and an old friend from many years, never thought he could go through this 1946 schedule unbeaten. e o a The Way of the Mob ' (To Ted Williamt, Joe DiMagfio and Eddie Arcaro) All you who get the cheering And the plaudits from the mob. Who shrink because they bawl you Out upon some off-day Job, Who scowl because they call you names That no one likes to hear, Who keep the welkin ringing from The hoarse hoot to the cheer, Who build you up and knock you down, From here to kingdom come. Remember as the game goes on They never boo a bum. I've heard them hiss Hans Wagner And I've heard them snarl at Cobb. I've heard them holler 'Take him out." With Matty on the Job. I've heard them curse when Ruth struck out Or Speaker missed a play. For 40 years I've heard them ride The heroes of their day. I've heard their roaring welcome Switch to something worse than hum, But Eddie, Ted and Joe, get this They never boo a bum. 0 0 0 Ted Williams could never hit his earlier stride after Labor Day. A good point was made in suggesting sug-gesting that Ted was letting too many near strikes balls an inch or so away from the plate thde by through his unerring judgment jf balls and strikes. This could be true since it it if. ficult to get your swirg movirg tn the split fraction of a second Be3d In following a pitch that fr. Ted Is a great swing er, bat even : the greatest need a little mere time to get the bat under way wtuV fad Dower back of the meties. A pitch two tnt hr ed the plate la i Just as easy to hit as eae ever the corner. But any way you look at it, Williams Wil-liams dropped a bundle of prestige since the slump overtook him back In early September. It carried right on to the end of the season, and the world series. The boos sounded sound-ed particularly bitter In his ears, it Is reported. Well, that's the way in sports and in life. JIT ' 'Caught In his own trap, you might say, he's the architect archi-tect who designed this course!" NANCY ' WHO ARE you LOOKING MUTT AND JEFF HOW ABOUT Ort, MY, NO! THIS ttSU? THAT'S TOO 9 53 aMUCH! f REG'LAR FELLERS AT ? Mte :as I rrrv i ) I 1 V 1Ori,MV,N0! HERE'S ONE J HO! K&h TT WELL, HAVEN'T NO.1 THE FlSK ) WE JUST LAV 'EM ) p THAT'S Tool LADV ,f INSTILL mLqA V?,uceAr HAVE THE jf DOWN AND V .MUCH! r WS! Y'd r.T lStfALES cCA.ES.' tUEV WEIflH fSw r T " ' IT alii - ""e,.'" v I I' -3 V f V .'-.-'-l 1 I la. J I f I -M.JV. 0fa TaaWuaT.S I - - . . I -T-C; .J LITTLE REGGIE By Margarita i WANT ME TO jVi-v f OH HOW JV WHAT A KINO,1 I' STADIUM 1 1 1 1 IjJ 1 1 I & kJ THIRD O0WN AND M I TAKE YOUR JV S LOVELY- I (f THOUGHTFUL 4 lP2! H'fJmFRAh rWM PARROT FOR 4KL BUT BE j?CHILD... LITTLE 1 (AH HERE 1k-fJ; i AN AIRING 7 CAREFUL W REGINALD 15! iTiTlC WE ARE O' I ( 7W71 M0 J MRS. VAN LOON? i tA WITH HER, V -w 1 1 M lkV)rf I KW" i! iTZTl JITTER By Arthur Pointer ' ' ' ." A what we et three, buck-!! S. f WHOA? x f GONNA DO FOB. OfoiT f NEVER. ABU I LOCK. THEtLE.' 1 '.WAGINE.S ( fOOTBAU HCIMETS " xj' TEAM . Vt problem Tmm 1 TMI5 iEASOrt VHEAO SCT3 AT THAT COUGH! J V IS SOLVED ' J ( WOW ! ) ( LINE W . yRClL By Len Klei, w I in iwAjrrX mx, SI ! 1 1 11 rYWTM ( rrwA5) Hjppi6iTj i lv&Q) dear, dear) rwi W " T ' I "'V 1 1 LtE,E 5IE I V k rr-yrnrri look Lirxt 1 ) i ii in r . ssasasasaM .aa ssa a a a. - BOBBY SOX It Mart) linkt "Let's see, Clifford . . . Yes I just happen to have Friday night open!" By Ernie Buthmiller HE'S A RtlcQ Si At lrTm I " C By Bud Fisher By Gene Byrnes ' J NOW! Bake any time... New Fleischmann's Fast Rising Dry Yeast VZ. ARE MY iyC i&Vd 1 'J mA Poor little chest muscles so tight they feel "squeezed" . . . so sore from hard coughing it hurts him to breathe? Quick, Mentholatum. Rub it on chest, back, neck. Its warm, gently stimulating action hplna lessen cnnppsr.inn with- vies utiwivut viiuu a uvuu iu normal skin. At same time comforting vapors lessen coughing spasms. GET MENTHOLATUM QUICKl Home -Town Echoes OP A I POLICY IS JUST WHAT 1 1 GOTMAfWEP IW I MDUNEEP! J j ( ' WEEK!J a cant qy7wi J S& mrriTwiiLGivel M f if U EVERY PTECTION! j f (W i V alMaliaJ at a moment's notice with IF YOU BAKE AT HOME-baking day k any day you feel like it, with New Fleischnuon! Fast Rising Dry Yeast. Easy-to-use, extra-fast Net Fleischmann's Fast Rising stays fresh, full etl-i for weeks on your pantry shelf, Always ready ft, instant action. Get New Fleischmann's Fast Risj, Dry Yeast today. The menfolk will brag aboa your DaauiK more man ever. At your grocer',, GOT HIM DOWN? Ni By C. Kessler Y CHIP OFF TWS CCD BLOCK- |