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THE CHEERFUL CHCR'Jb TKeac wir?g> th-^t Irw e-qwipptd witK V/orvt do For I tkoo^Wt I'd better tell vou They're. jw#t for decorttiorv RTC~" WNU Service. CLASSiFiED DEPARTMENT SCHOOLS prepare fer Post Office examinations. For iitrc literature write UKF.ViEff PREPARATORY SCHOOL, Dept. S. 1280 E. 114th St., Cleveland, Ohio. Evenly Paced Quiet minds can not be per plexed or frightened, but go on in fortune or misfortune at their own private pace, like a clock (luring u tiiuiiuerstoi m. ? K. T>, Stevenson. In Possession He who gets doth much, but h? who keeps doth more. ? Gaelic Proverb. IF YOUR NOSE "CLOSES UP* TONIGHT makes breathing difficult, put 3-pur pose VIcks Va-tro-nol up each, nostril. Va-tro-nol do's 3 important things. It (1) shrinks swollen membranes, (2) soothes irritation, (3) relieves tran sient nasal congestion. It brings more comfort, makes breathing easier, thus invites sleep . . . And remember , it helps prevent many colds developing if used in time. Follow directions in folder. FREE? SEEDS WORTH $1.*0I For 7 packages of Petunias, Zinnias, Mari golds, Sweet Peas, Candv-tuft. Morn Here's mighty good news ... If your nose "closes up" tonight and Strength in Religion The strength of empire is in re ligion. ? Ben Jonson. DONT LET CONSTIPATION SLOW YOU UP ? When bowels are sluggish and you feel irritable, headachy and everything you do is an effort, do as million* do ? chew FEEN-A-MIN P, the modern chewing gum laxative. Simply chew FEEN-A MINT before you go to bed? sleep with out being disturbed? next morning gentle, thorough relief, helping you feel swell again, full of your normal pep. Try FEEN-A-MLNT. Tastes good, is handy and economical. A generous family supply FEEN-A-MINFiT* WNU ? 7 G? 42 Today'" popularity of Doan's Pills, after many year* of world* wide use, surely must be accepted as evidence I of satisfactory use. And favorable public opinion supports that of the able physicians who test the value of Doan's under exacting laboratory conditions. * j Phy??c,?n3, too, approve every "word ?? ,?dvertisinf jou read, the objective of which ia only to recommend Doan's Pills ** ? good diuretic treatment for disorder of the kidney function and for relief of rfPa'n *n<* worr7 causes. If more people were aware of how the kidney* must constantly remove wast? that cannot stay in the blood without In jury to health, there would be better un derstanding of why the whole body suffers when kidneya lag, and diuretic medica tion would be more often employed. # Burning, scanty or too frequent urina tion sometimes warn of disturbed kidney function. You may suffer natreing baek *che, persistent headache, attacks of diz ziness, getting up nights, swelling, puffi nea# under the eyes ? feel weak, nervous. *11 played out. Use Doan's Pittt. It Is better to rely on ? medicine that has won world wide ac claim than on something lesa favorably known. Ask your nfiphborl T IF.UT. COM. GENE TUNNEY has rounded up a Brst-clasa set of ring men for the navy. But the army still has the top champ in a fellow by the name of Joe Louis. Many have said that the next world's heavyweight champion would come from this war assemblage ? which is a dead-sure bet. It's my guess that his name will be Joe Louis, if some unlooked for fate doesn't crowd In on the main act. Or if army life doesn't pack too much extra weight on the Bomber's It tech hirr, oiiiy a iew days to add an extra ten pounds after he'd cleaned out Buddy Baer Army life can put on weight as well as take it off. The ring has never had a champion before who spent so much time in a training camp, who nicked off more miles in roail work, year after year, than Jolting Joe. It will be interesting to see how much Lonis weighs some three months from now. Louis called the turn in his last fight long before the fight was ever made. He was training for Lou Nova at the time. We were talking about his first Buddy Baer meeting and the Billy Conn fight. Always ducking nnythin t* that InnfeArt HVa ?>" JOE LOUIS alibi, the Bomber finally admitted that he was stale and well below par in both contests. "Before I fought Buddy Baer in Washington," he said, "I was dead tired. I trained in a hot place and ; I began to see black spots before my eyes. I didn't have no pep left. I hit Buddy plenty that time, but there wasn't much steam back of my punches." It was all different in the second Buddy Baer party after Joe had got- j ten his rest and had recovered his lost steam. Quite different. Louis also admitted on the same occasion that he wasn't any too keen before the Billy Conn roundup. "He's a fast boy," Louis said, "but I wasn't right. I was too slow. Maybe be made mc lock slower, bat 1 can be faster than I was then. I was still stale. I'll be different for Nova." Conn is the challenger picked for the next Louis start, if there is an other heavyweight battle soon. At least, the slender Pittsburgher is the only one given a chance. As fine a boxer and as game a kid as Conn is, I still think he got a break in catching Louis below form. Louis also got a break, on the odd side. "Here's a funny thing," Conn told me, "the best punch I threw cost me that fight. I'll tell you how and why. I had hoped and expected to octbox him. I was doing that through the middle of the 12th round. But near the end of that round I nailed Joe on the jaw with a good punch. I saw his knees half- I buckle and bis eyes roll. I knew I'd j hurt him. I thought he was about | through. So I decided at that spot I I'd knock him out. "I wasn't content any longer to win a decision. I got rough instead of getting smart. If I hadn't landed that punch I'm pretty sure I wouldn't have taken the chance I took? wading in and swinging flat footed. I gave him a still target to hit in place of a moving target. And I wasn't hurt at th<- time. Don't let anyone tell you his body blows had worn me down. They hadn't. "It was that belt on the head in the 13th when I was trying to out punch him that turred the trick. It isn't often that your best punch costs you a fight. But that's what hap pened to me." At Hi.s Best It Is my guess that Louis was only keyed up in something like four contests. One was against Mas I Baer. The other was the second Schmeling light. The third was against Tony Galento. The fourth was his final shot against Buddy Baer. Gems of Thought CO NEAR is falsehood to the ^ truth that a wise man would do well not to trust himself on the narrow edge. ? Cicero. Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time, for that Is the Muff life is made ol. ? Franklin. The alone that is rotting can gather no most : Who often remoieth is sure of loss. ? T utter. Bad men will excuse their faults, good men will leave them.? Ben Jonson. Study as if you were to live forever. Live as if you were to die tomorrow. ? Isidore of Seville. } ASK MS ANOTHER A quiz wilh uitswers offering information on various subjects The Quettionr 1. What is an abcedarian? 2. What is known as the right of angiry? 3. What year saw the ratifica tion of the woman suffrage amendment to the Constitution? 4. What Spanish king built the Invincible Armada? 5. Approximately how many children took part in the disas trous children's crusade in 1212? 6. In what way were Abraham and Lot of the Bible related? 7. What is a bibliophile? 8. Who is called the father of English poetry? The Answers 1. A beginner. 2. A belligerent nation's right to seize property of neutraU. 3. The year 1920. 4. Philip I*. 5. Approximately 50,000. 6. Uncle and nephew. 7. A lover of books. 8. Chaucer. A FEW OF THE MANY LUXURY PREMIUMS RALEIGH SMOKERS GET D?lux? Bridge Tabla with genuine inlaid wood to j?. Autoaati? !?g!ocks. Hmw American Cook Book. 102-4 pageo full of rocipea. 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The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
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Feb. 12, 1942, edition 1
11
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