Gay Combination to Crochet, Embroider -Jbti V ? 7498 f UST see what a happy combina ** Uoo of crochet and embroidery! Notice how the crochet forms bas kets or borders to set off flowers. ? ? ? Use Ok* crocheted section singly or re ossl * as shown Pattern 7498 has trans mr ef ? motif* 8 by 9 to 5 by 15',a Inches; crochet directions. Due to an unusually large demand and corral conditions, slightly more time is aaqpdred In filling orders for a few of the ??t papular pattern numbers, fired four order to: AmHbc Circle Needlecraft Dept. ? Stghlh Ave. New York Pacluea 30 cents for Pattern. Ma A Dab a Day keeps P.O? away! <*???? fm Odor) J YODORfl OEODORflOT CREflm ?tail stiff ot itlckfl Soft?h afiMda Ilk* lace cream. ? ta actually sooabingl Uu rigb ataar aha ring?will not Irritate. ?Am light, pleasant scant. N o aickl y ?tal to cling to Angara or clothing. ?1 not spoil dslicats fabrics. r?c trnmm In (he tropica?mada by no rasa ?gaava that Yodora protacta undar try tag ea^Mooa. fa labes or for* Mc 25c 60c. JMtawas A Aetata, fac^Irfa?agart,Ca?a. FOOT SUFFERERS wmmtw ointment tor quickly reliev tagtantag, itching and perspiring feet. Waitsital for ATHLETE S FOOT and am wrflrai deodorant. Used for over ?39 years srtth remarkable results rmw rr now; ii.aa postpaid. Address: tmb wnrr laboratories. Dept. 4 W. Oi Bn 434S, Philadelphia If. Peame. CANT YOU SLEEP? ? \*j?- f / iwj I1THEN the stress of modem " bring get* "on your nerves" ? good sedative can do a lot to lessen nervous tene.on. to make yoo more comfortable, to permit aoa&i sleep. Neat time a day's work and ?any or a night's wakefulness, makes you Irritable, Restless or J?af gives you Nervous lleod askssr Nervous Indigestion, try Miles NERVINE ("l-" or Effervescent TableU) Males Nervine is a time-tested eedatisg that has been bringing icfief front Functional Nervous Dts f lames for sixty yenra yet is as cgMo-date as this montmc's netsa paper. Liquid Me and ?LM, Effer BOBBY SOX ?y Marty Links ft II I ~ ^ " I Jj "Let's see It again?I still don't believe a woman can J possibly resist Gregory Peck for two boors!" CROSS TOWN By Roland Coe wmr ? Vw-? 8W "Don't worry, Mora?It'i only my teddy bear." NANCY I WISH HE'D LEAVE? I'VE BEEN HINTING FOR .? g^HOURSj ^ NANCV HOW S ABOUT ONE SAME |j OF CHECKERS ?---, ? 1 THEN I'LL GO N HOME r? OH, SLUGGO---1 I INVENTED A NEW KIND J OF CHECKER /Si GAME By Ernie Bmhmiller fj IT'S PLAYED WITH f? ' \^A SMALLER BOARDJ ' MUTT AND JEFF JEFF WHAT i ARE'YOU r" ! V OOIH6? J V- 1 L lamming! he door! j fwrtATVp0R PRACTICE! I \=?r?oJ rMSTOOVINfi I TO BE A \J~ (soundEFFECTS I v \MAN on the I man\ 3WER- \ JOARO!J moA helst) V\fc . By Bud Fisher f r 1 ll ? /m EOW~g iMEOlti b LITTLE REGGIE By Margarita |~ JITTER //1 ' By Arthur Pointer ^\VVS.VWW1 i?. \ - 1 I ft !&$$} TO tf|?AuTREAP^J PAL^ REAPEt^ RECLAR FELLERS By Gene Byrnes Rt BON DOWN TOTHtN Ef HSU MARKET AND 6CT H MB SOME R3H, P1NHBAO ANY KINO SO I WONT. ^3. MMT T3 60 HOME < -^^tEAOrY HAMPBP^ \ WATS ALL \ wwscrr- 1 MCE IT OR. ) leave rriy OKAY, iMOM UB6REZ OL take _ ^ ywmtlx vou see ckuoht-th' bo ts \ CMOtYINA 'cm -you KNOW HOM ooa umud anew ?mn6s0ff' j I?**) *s ^xL fbozw nuns \ or mackemu- ) HAW HAW /'' vaas??* VIRGIL WB 1 ?d?? T I U By Leu Kleit f Iru pun a little ) L KflRfHL- 00 MX) EXPECT ^ THIS CAP OP MXKSTO 1 HAM6 mttf UP WTHAT \ r woolo i iKNICfc) / would mod w1no ) a I ma.n6ikj6 J J, " \ mouftsei-f ^gt.' \ up. cap? k jj\ thank 1 <zA SILENT SAM By Jeff Haye? NOW I flAVIMO I lysws Amazingly Yours ?o By VERN GODKIN T OOKING at her husband as ^ though it were his fault, Amelia Ames complained, "this chow mein is too crisp." George Ames grinned good-na turedly and winked at his daugh ter and son-in-law. They started to smile, sobered as Mrs. Ames spoke again. "Judy, eat your egg too yung. It's go~d for you, and you need it. I think I'll have to come and spend another week with you and get you built up." Judy opened her mouth to say something, then started eating. Ted frowned. "She weighs as much as she ever did," he said. "Well, she wouldn't If I didn't watch over her. Look what hap pened when you moved to Albany. Poor Judy was worn out just from the packing up. If I hadn't gone right along with her and helped her get settled she'd have been in bed for a month . . . and also I had to :ome up there every other week to see that she took care of herself. That's why I insisted that you move back here again near us so that I :ould keep a closer eye on her. Even now I hate to go off on this trip with George for fear she'll do some thing foolish." George gave up. But it was time to do something about it. He lay swake long that night as an idea formed. At the office the next morning he stopped in the middle of prepara tions for a month's business trip through the West to phone Ted to Amelia Ames . . . her crisp manner was just a cover op for a soft heart. unch with him. It was going to ake some careful planning to get around Amelia, they agree. Things went along fairly smooth y for three weeks. New towns and lew faces always appealed to Ame ia. Then, on the day before they vere to start their return trip, 3eorge came back to the hotel ?oom to find her feverishly packing. "We're leaving in an hour," she innounced. "I got plane reserva ions by telling them that Judy was n a serious situation." "Judyl What's happened?" "Sue . . . she . . . Oh, read the etter. It's there on the dresser." George smothered a grin. "I don't tee anything here to get excited ibout. It just says they've bought i ranch." "Not only a ranch, but a cattle -anch," she almost shrieked. "Well, why not? That's what Ted itudied for at college." Amelia ig tored him. "Imagine, taking poor ludy out on a place like that . . , wenty miles from the nearest town . . . and they've already moved, ["hat letter's over a week old. . . . 3h, my poor lamb! ... all alone in i deserted ranch house. George managed to send a tele gram to Ted. "Get out the Welcome nat and make it big." Ted tried his best. He even had leighboring cowhands on horseback neet them at the ranch gate to es cort their taxi the last half mile. Amelia was impressed, but not doled. She was looking for Judy. They found her at the ranch house, lressed in jeans, riding boots, and in orange silk shirt open at the hroat. Amelia gulped In unbelief. "Why, [ was never so amazed in my life." the declared to George as they got nto bed a few hours later. "My ludy, dressed like a movie cowgirl . . . and proud of it . . . and the louse, all in perfect order . . . and the wouldn't let me do a thing!" "That dinner wasn't bad either," George added. "Bad! It was perfect. I couldn't lave done better myself. It's amaz ng," she repeated, almost regret lully. George chuckled. "Well, isn't she rour daughter?" He would liked to have seen Ted ibout now and said "I told you so," is he recalled their lunch a month igo. "Judy's really all that you could ?rant her to be, Ted," he'd said. 'Just give her a chance to break he apron strings and get going by terself and you'll see." Ted hadn't looked too convinced hen, but he had the proof now. In fact when he had said goodnight, he bad whispered, "She's a regular chin iff the old block," and winked and ?odded at Amelia. 1 '? ? ' I VHE ash-swinging miz-up in ti:e American League among such riflemen as Ted Williams, Hank Greenberg, Charlie Keller and Joe DiMaggio has been Ted Williams more beetle tnan 11 at first looked to be. Ted Williams, the Red Sox blast er, was the man to beat back in mid April, and he is still the one to beat through the long August and Septem ber march ahead. Only Wakefield has fallen behind schedule among the big hitters. The others have picked up just about where they left off and the scramble still will be keen along most of the remaining route. There is little chance now that anyone will come close to overtaking Babe Ruth's high mark of 60 homers, or the two big years that Jimmy Fox* and Hank Greenberg had in the past ? but it will take around 45 homers to lead the two circuits, and the four present leaders all have a shot at this target. While Joe DiMaggio's general av erage has been well below other years ? his lifetime mark is around .337 ? the Yankee outfield er hasn't lost his grip on the home run bat. His long-distance range remains. It has remained for Charlie Keller to improve in both departments ? the Maryland Maul er has moved into his biggest sea son and so far he shows no signs of slipping back. While Yankee hitting generally has been below the expected aver age up to this Jyly date, its home run count has been healthy enough. In the way of long distance blows, Keller, DiMaggio, Henrich, Gordon, Lindell and others have managed to hold their own or do just a shade better. The American League still has the margin in power. In the National Johnny Mize of the Giants is still the top home-run hitter in the old er circuit. National League support ers will tell you that National League hitters have to face smart er and better pitching. This may be true but we doubt it. We can't quite visualize better National League pitching than Feller, New houser, Chandler, Hughson, Ferriss and a few more have been offering. For the past 25 years the Amer ican League has adopted the old Babe Ruth slogan ? not to "hit ' 'em where they ain't" but to hit 'em where they can't get at >m. In the way of a home run market, it is almost a certainty that the Amer ican will have the four top men. Baseball again has proved, as boxing proved in the case of Joe Louis, that the punch is the last thing to leave the athlete's system. Hank Greenberg certainly has proved it to a marked degree. Hank is no elastic cat around first base ?the old legs are not what the young legs used to be. They never are. But the Tiger slugger has proved that he can keep on getting his home runs, whatever else may have happened through the enervating process of added years and a long war layoff. Your Money's Worth From which sport does one get the best return for the money he invests as a spectator? We offered this query to a rather large group of sports-loving fanatics who follow the fortunes of many games. We be gan to figure out the cost, plus the excitement, the thrill and the sat isfaction derived. It broke down something like this: I. For a World Series game, the cost for a reserved seat is $5.50. The cost of a seat for a series of three games is $16.50. Z. For an Army-Notre Dime or an Army-Navy football game the top seat cost is $4.40. The price is no higher for a Michi gan - Ohio State or a Pennsyl vania - Army contest ? fcr any football contest. 3. For an Open Golf contest the cost is $2 54. 4. For an International Polo match the cost tag is around $5. 5. No championship or high ranking basketball game costs more than $3 or $4 for a seat. 6. Ton can see a national ten nis championship match for no more than $5 if that mneh. 7. For a day at the Olympie games yon could get a good seal for $3. S. Ton caa get one of the best seats at the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness or the Belmont for prices that range from $5 to $1*. It was here the argument warmed up, all on one side. Then why should a boxing match range from $16.50 to $100, when on a gen- . eral average the contestants involved are far below the average skill of baseball, football and other stars, including golf? One answer might be that the public is willing to pay. It is, of course, all up to the sporting public. It still can be said that no law exists which forces anyone to pay far more than a show is worth ? and the public is the only agent that can handle the situation.

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