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Show U0 PAGE SIX THE TIMES- - NEWS, NEPHI, UTAH BOBBY SOX cross town Ay Yj'' L M !i " yJ Y Roland Cot Marty Links '' fS Y5 A. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Zriut,e-j- f ' raiding- roch junior - every home dressmaker special learares. free pattern printed inside the ook. 21 cents. Send youi order to: 'TPHE toughest job In sport lsn'1 sinking a six-foputt in a pinch or emerging from a heel print in the sand. It isn't throwing a pass or pitching to a clutch hitter with the bases full. It isn't umpiring a baseball game. If you care to hear the correct answer It is working as a football "r j jjf ' Thursday, October 16, 1947 pattern desired. Pattern No 40-ya- official. The DEPT. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN 828 Mission St., San Francisco, Calif. Enclose 25 cents in coins for each Size Addres- s- base- ball umpire has a setup In compari f X 1J son. Hurry-u- p Yosl of Michigan told me once that he doubted that any play was ever run off in Oh, this reminds me what was that Important Issue said we ought to wire our congressman about?" "But, dear. Daddy only wants to borrow It for today!' NANCY I tVTIGO f " V , " . V,s ) OF lunch HOW ABOUT NICE EAR OF CORN I'LL L 7 GET R SFTW?MT RTO r I VETHINy"S - z S rferT-"tzmrsrx-- a TT -VB0y 7 AJ GOODNESS I NEVER SAW ANYONE EAT To N rT sSPSiu-- --- 1 naltyoff side, HE'S THE ,1 rf Z 4fJf I , HARMONICA V I J'SS? w PLAYER X well-selecte- d, i'W IVWTTAND J" By Bud Fisher NWNG?YErt,THES uMvVt JItHE ""WS ENDING TKATS ENDING IS 1 CXl OP ONLY My PLAY? SpoiLS ,T fyZLJly THE JITTER SUE. THIS IS JIJ IfcK. YOUR WOUU) YOU EVE ON NlM WHILE INP t AM J TOO BEGINNING.' I J FAR FROM THE' THEREYirrT. WW THAT'S THE VOO HAVE DONT TKE " I WHY? VILLAIN SHOOT ENDtNGM HIWVSELF INSTEAD Z-- THEM TMIS EMINENT - 1 " EUROPEAN) - wTO 7Q f WAKE .f. lT THE Yl UP AUDIENCE AT L. ; - Y.AND ) J. j By Arthur Pointer , ' . "T"a - VUUU p II-I- A STUNNING date frock for 1 juniors with slim lines to praise a yoathf ul figure, slanted 1 than just a tonic it's powerful nourishment! lines boldly accented with unusual novelty buttons. An MORE eye-catch- er for LI I II Thousands of happy folks know this! Good-tastiScott's Emulsion helps 70a ward off colds helps you get well faster and helps you keep needs going strong when your diet more natural A&D Vitamins 1 Scott's is a HIGH ENERGY FOOD TONIC rich in natural A&D Vitamins and energy-buildin- g natural oil. Try it I See how well you feel. Easy to take and digest. Economical. Buy today at your drug store I V 8 - Lao EMULSION SCOTT'S in- terference, illegal use of hands or other infractions. Here you have 22 keen, active, overeager young men scattered over la good part of the field in a game that is packed with penalties. No four sets of eyes can follow every infraction, especially on the part of tnose who know how, when and where to slide by a rule. I'd like to say here that no set of officials work harder, train harder or try harder than 90 per cent of aU football officials. They are honest, intelligent, and they usually take a deep pride In their work. But they are up against an impossible job. Having worked five years as a football official in the South, before groping later for the older age of hazy reason, I have found it somewhat difficult to ride officials who have impossible jobs to handle. There is holding, of one sort or another, on almost jevery play. Ask some of the players in the line who have been jerked off balance by a quick hand, a movement that took less than a split second. Or this matter of pass interference in the rush and jump for the bailor the split second start of the backs or the smart ones who know how to time and beat off side by half a stride. It isn't too easy to say which penalties affect a play and which don't. But this is where the smarter officials come In where in other years, Ed and Tom Thorpe were supremetwo of the best football ever has known. Certainly too much whistle and horn blowing can wreck any game, coming from too many callers, who now and then have the idea they are the afternoon's main attractions. But this doesn't happen often. An official with sound, sane judgment in handling a game, where one close decision can make or break either team, is football's major asset. But don't let anyone tell you it isn't a tough assignment the toughest one I know in sport. The horn is certainly no instrument of merriment or melody. manv old folks .1 1III1UL ..ata.Sv::yK-:SSXT start- terference, pass CHAM?eInM . sav BS- ing too quickly, Grantland Rice holding, illegal in- By Ernie Bushmiller . i 1 football ' that was minus completely some form of pe- certain. Pattern No. 8224 comes in sizes 11, 12, 14, 18 and 18. Size 12, cap sleeve, yards of 33 or s The Fall and Winter FASHION a wealth of sewing Information lor 13, 3V eon-tain- Beware Coughs And Your Strength and . Energy la Below Par from common colds That Hang On relieves promptly It may be caused by disorder of kidney function that permits poisonous waste to accumulate. For truly many people feel tired, weak and miserable when the kidneys fail to remove excess acids and other waste matter from the blood. You may suffer nagging backache, rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness, getting up nights, leg pains, swelling. Sometimes frequent ana scanty urination with smarting and burning is another sign that something is wrong with the kidneys or bladder. There should be no doubt that prompt treatment is wiser than neglect. Use Doan'a PilU. It is better to rely on a medicine that has won countrywide apthan on something less favorably proval known. Docn't have been tried and tested many years. Are at all drug stores. Get Doan s today. , beCreomulsion cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, Inflamed bronchial mucous memb- ranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding- you must like the way it Quickly allays the cough or you are to nave your money back. CREOMULSION Bronchitis for Couzhs, Chest Colds, I get a transfer?" driver snorted, "Mister, all can get on this bus is off!" "Can The ou if ........ 10. ."-".r- Martin 1:.: 'oKe.. Hear, Car. that ' their favorite All Bowled Over Old King Cole now has more bowls than he ever dreamed about as be called for his Fiddlers Three and proceeded to get But the two big money bowls are the Rose and the Sugar, where the two pie-eye- d. I LIKE capacities are 93.000 and 73.000 at crack. Not a bad financial goal for those lucky enough to crowd into the final picture, although this cash is scattered around as far as the Rose Bowl is concerned. Here, no one makes any big killing. Which is the way it should be. College football still has a long way to go in getting away from too much finance. $4 a REGULAR l"5! FELLERS Ari HilHV By CeneByrne, I rr11 jT xj1"0 New Golf Champion More than a few followers of TASTY, SM0K1UG COMFORT I GET WITH CRIMP CUT PRINCE ALBERT M MY PIPE "I hava been aniovinv Princa Albert in my pipe for years, say Henry Carver. "P. A. gives ma a taity-ric- h smoke that stays mild." the ancient and green want to know more about Skee Riegel, the new amateur golf champion of the U. S. Skee is much better known in the Far West than he is throughout the rest of our bunkered domain. The Impression seems to t that some rank outsider has takea over the amateur thron of golf. This Idea Is strictly incorrect. Only a fine golfer could have won over the Pebble Beach est, one of the toughest In golf. What sort of a golfer and what brand of a fellow is the new championmeaning Mr. Riegel? We took this problem to Al ClucI, one of the best golf instructors in the country, now in charge at Lake-vlllLong Island. "1 can tell you this," Ciucl told me. "A worthy champion and a fine fellow now wears the crown. Craig Wood and I worked with Skee in 1941, when he had been playing golf only three years. He was then in the high 70. He had come along in a hurry because he wanted to learn, and he was willing to practice all well-trappe- d 'jj VIRGIL -v vehI i hardI p ten ? .M6T0bSVJiILD t thought ELEVEN BrLenKIei, Stfef ) TMECEWEIX tiiiiij I THE TONGUE-EAS- Y CRIMP CUT 01 "Sir iyp' -- SURE ROUS UP FAST AND EVEN INTO G MILD, MA KIN'S' SMOKES SWELL-TASTIN- nz e. si'A WC . "' V ... 1 cut frinee Albert ,,.mjr choic ior 'rolling cigarettes," says 3 ?,,l! V"fV47 ffVt V 1 Herbert Martin. "And tobacco tmokes cool and mild." llM i I towimMmMiMt1jtjll day. "Here's an odd angle on Skee. Thry call Frank fttranahan 'MiiK-le- ' Ktranahan or 'Mr. Muscle.' But in my opinion Riegel Is much stronger than Strana-ha-n. They oecht to call Skee, 'Double Mascle.' I've never rrn anyone cloe to his weight. 189 pounds, with such powerful upper and forearms. Skee la what I'd cU a power hitter, or a smasn bitter. prince Albert A. PRINCE ALBERT tM "" hi rtac ftSMri-- a CJ m." Sataeea, eight, a. a . c. Oof t . j :m S4.il i j.."" , |