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Guest Pillowcases Make a Nice Gift 5056 IF YOU want to give an exquisite * gift to a special friend at Christ mastime, then make up these pret ty guest pillowcases. You'll need a couple of skeins of lavender, pur ple, pink and green floss to em broider the pansy clusters?a ball or so of crochet thread to work up the pineapples, the symbol of hos pitality. ? ? ? To obtain complete crocheting instruc Uoee and transfer design for the Pineap ple add Pansy Designs (Pattern No. 9056) ci)4?r chart for embroidering, aend 20 cents tn coin, your name, address and tha pattern number. Send your order to: SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK IIS* Sixth Ave. New York, N. Y. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. *? Address Gas on Stomach Maaad la ft adaafeM ar daaMa year mm* ha* WWa cxtmm sI ii hi i Si ftdd eum palafai. .of foe.! taMM ?? Untold ud havuwra^doetors tmimllf j*7i*~ iT*Jwf- JlawL. uiu iu. Taf i t*o HisUTf brtac* mcafort i n ? HOy or <Mli Mur mmmi teak ?a rWara of bottio U ? he at *11 dHHtoa Mary dorter* recommend rood tntiBi Bectt. EmaUion be MUM it's rich la mmturml A AD Vi Latrine aad energy-bolldlnp oil children arrd for proper (r??tK, strong hones, sound teeth, .tardy bodies. Helps bmOd ?p rfjuhM* to colds torn If diet la AAD deficient. Boy flcott'o (ado*/ Ail dnmiete. CALOX tar the tottio on your smile Effirirml CmUx works fw rtyn A Helps remove Ua..,briai ow ?li the a*rural lustre of four 2 A special ingredient la Calos encourage* regnAer manage ... er bich has a tonic elect oa gums ...heips make chcm &CSS gad roar Tone uproar smile... sridi CM Mn* a |n? Minis taiirmiiin. (If paars * ?>nn n-tii d tan im BUY YOUR EXTRA 5AVIN6S BONDS NOW 3 CROSS TOWN Bv Roland Cot Caught In his own trap, yon might amy, he's the archi tect who designed this eonrse!" BOBBY SOX ?? Marti LMu I "Left see, Clifford . .. Tea?I just happen to have Friday nifht open!" NANCY I t II i i ? WHO ARE ) you LOOKING m . AT ?j*m A\y UNCLE ? HE LIVES ) a?IN DAT HOUSE \? let me see what he looks like v " /? ? By Ernie Boehmiller HE'S A \ monster; MUTT AND JEFF - MOW ABOUT ]ort. MV, NO! THIS FlSH? [THAT'S TOO I #2.53 JjlMUCH! r HERE'S ONE. T MO! -ADVJtuv/snu_ \Mucny By Bud Fisher T-^A WELL, haven'T ^TTr^ NojTHiFisrt J have the jr SCALES/"^] " ' i /Ti WE JUST LAV EM ) ? DOWN AND f ? TrtEV WEIGH how'S ytf THIS? I2<j j TfoJTTg much 7 does \u wetgrt^| LITTLE REGGIE I U1UT Mr TA \ I _-l_ I I , .. . .. ^ ^ By Margarita f Innii i rib ? U l , TAKE YOUR )_l j PARROT FOR J \ AN AIRING \| MRS VAN LOON ?11 f OH HOW \ I LOVELY- < ' BUT BE ' CAREFUL WITH HER, .WONT YOU I J^YWHAI A KIND, 'STHOUGHTFUL 4 CHILD...LITTLt I ^^REGINALD IS I stadium in, u n FOOT BALL y* ' "-MiJI/: TOO*v / AH HERE if THIRD DOWN AND ) _!5#_> THE BALL /$ ON < I W I THE TWENTY YARD) t, j 1 V LINE ft ' 1 ' J? si I t JITTER By Arthur Pointer I I I i i I TT^TTTT.. ~ -t.-? REG'LAR FELLERS By Gene Byrnes y i dunho ^v2C??0?'1J4 J XMAT wt et gonna oo bob. firtrr^frd f FOOTBALL HCIMCT3 \ THIS ifcASOW ? / 7 "oataAL J 79 ? E3 /WWiHE- NEARLY THREE. 6UCICS-!! "WE'LL. NEVER BE ABU \ TD GET TH' WHOLE TEAM j ^HeAO SCT3 ATTM*T 0OO6H' / | i lock -there.' 1 v th whole problem i is solved! ^hit tin ik v? (wok#!) sfetutt une<n jj' X__V C-i V oneo" J-y VIRGIL ; By Leo Kleis I NwrHfc I > tosrftv/E- ViJ > SURE / f 1MWMM \ ( rrvwksl /kjpwugitn \ s * < ( TM? ACOJTVt I I DimE ? ) V, VMkV HOME \ X, S. j-' ^HJOKSC?<XX/ r3-^.TCVA_ ^ irrT'i / wait\ CiS) (?S15 (wONOEftFULf//, '// ????' '/// /, SILENT SAM By Jeff Haye. I ^ P lw i 1 ? ? II ? 7 ^ ? IT IS my belief that after 194J, 1 Army and Navy will fade out of the football picture, as far as win ners are concerned. Sure, they had all the best of it in 1944 and 1943. But 1946 will be different, as Navy already has found out and Army is finding out. It must beadmit ted that Army and Navy had the breaks in the two war years of 1944 and 1945. But when the war ended, it was a new story. After 1946 every one knows Army GrsntlaodRice and Navy won't have a chance against the 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, more 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 is strict discipline and do financial help. They are an integral part of the United States?the cash comes first. This applies to both coaches and players. Unfortunately, the world wrecking war also tore a heavy gash into sportsmanship, the old idea of a "fair field and no favor, may the best man win." Sportsmanship is now a word you find in the dictionary. FootbalVs Top Target When you've piled up a long string of consecutive victories over a 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 aD after Army. First it was Villa nova, then Oklahoma, Cornell and Michigan. Then eame Colombia, Doke, West Virginia and the cru cial test with Notre Dame. Penn sylvania and the Navy clash will end the fray. Most of the others ran two, three and four deep. Army runs less than two deep. Notre Dame runs deep er than all the others, three and fonr deep. But they still can play only 11 [ men at a time. This is something of a fallacy in this modern gamh, where they wear out quicker than they ever did in the old days. 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. ? ? ? The Wai of the Mob (To Ted Williams, loo DiMaggiq and Eddie Arcsuo) All you woo get the cheering And the plaudits from the mob. Who shrink because they bawl you uui upon some on-aay ]od, Who scowl because they call you names That no one likes to hear, j 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 beard them cusse when Ruth struck out? Or Speaker missed a play. For 40 years I've beard 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. ? ? ? Ted Williams could never hit his earlier stride after Labor Day. A good point was made in sug gesting that Ted was letting too man/ near siruies?Daus an men or | so away from the plate?slide by i through his unerring judgment of i balls and strikes. This could be true since it is dif ficult to get your swing moving in the split fraction of a second needed in following a pitch that far. Ted is a great swinger, bat even the greatest need a little mare time ta get the bat under way with fail pawer back af the motiaa. A pitch two inches off the plate is jest as easy ta hit as ane over the corner. But any way you look at it, 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 bound ed particularly bitter in his ears, it is reported. Well, that's the way in sports and in life. If you must set a dish direetly on the ice in the ice box, place a jar rubber underneath it This will prevent its sliding. To retain a design or lettering which appears on furniture, canis ters, breadboxes which you wish to repaint, spread a thin coating of melted wax with a fine brush over the design or lettering. This preserves the design* In lubricating locks: Take a discarded throat or nasal atomiz er. Fill it with very light machine oil and spray the working parts lightly. Applied in this manner there is small likelihood of the oil gumming. While you have the side plate removed notice how the parts have been worn by use and weather. Keep a record on paper of what happens when your child.is. sick. Such a record will be of great help to the doctor. On it write the child's temperature and the time it was taken, the number of times he vomited, and when body elimi nation took place. ?a? ffwoulrat ann ua aawvaa^aj! V/ICAKJ 3WU3 (.ail UC (.U11CV1CU simply by inserting a piece of rubber under the treads. If no rubber scrap is available make a wedge of soft wood and insert firmly with the hand. ??? To prevent the rusting of needles, keep them in a small bottle. ANOTHER I ; 1 A General Quiz B | The Questions 1. What is the maximum.fine for failure to vote in Cuba? 2. Whp invented life insurance? 3. Was "Calamity Jane" a real person? 4. What was the first country in the world to have a national flag? 5. Is Alaska bigger than Texas? 6. At what rate does the Niagara Falls flow? 7. How many countries in South America have no seacoast? 8. What is the navy's "Project Squid"? The Answers 1. The maximum fine is $500. 2. The ancient Romans. 3. Yes. Her real name was Mrs. Martha Burke. She dressed as a man and acted as a scout in Indian raids around 1870. 4. .Denmark, in 1219 A. D. 5. Yes, more than twice as big. 6. About 500,000 tons a minute. 7. Two?Bolivia and Paraguay. fl Thn notrn's nrAffro rv* mVtOeaKw W. "O'J -? mivivi/j five colleges will do research in liquid rockets and intermittent jet propelled weapons. Disaster - fighters i c t >- ' X:-J " w .. - rcw Americana red lie that the protection of thou sands of. lives and billions at xfeliuM*warthof piopeity rests in the hands of the peacetime Regular Army. Army Engineers are con - - -stanthrstwork along our great ' " rivers, building dams and levees, di edging channels and Hising the lataat scientific metfc - -Ode to ooptsd.flood waters, Sts^d when the rivers burst their bonds, those same Engineers , are ready to battle night and I day, raising sandbag barriers and rescuing flood victims. U?. -1? ?^??- c young men are joining the Reg ular Army, knowing that they will have an opportunity to work with the moat modern equipment and do a construc tive job, of utmost value ta their country. * TOM IfOIUkl MMY KIM* Tit MT10I UD MM Kill M
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 7, 1946, edition 1
6
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