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Presidential Omea Neither political party in the (0 year period haa reelected lta can didate (or the presidency Immedi ately alter losing' an ott-year auc tion. Dielectric Valee Because at their high dielectric value, coatings based on phenolic resins have found large usage (or electrical Insulation. The reddish broaiB coating on motor armature windingi la phenolic. Softly Tailored T wo-Piece F rock r\ESIGNED to flatter the more mature figure is this charm ing two piece dress. It's softly tailored with shoulder gathers giv ing a feminine touch. The simple to make paneled skirt falls easily and smoothly. You can wear it season after season in suitable fabrics. ? a ? Patient No. 113J Is (or sizes 34. 36. 38. OS. 43. 44. 49 and 4*. Size 36. short sleeves. 4 yards of 3?-tnch material. SWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT. m soots wens si. casernes i, iu. Kaelose 23 cents In coins (or each patten desired. Potlan No ^Slsa ?sac WLLRATS! Wth RAT-Afl Coataint A MTU Baa? "Rat. Bit. ib. Km", Reader'. n#M, Ocl. in*. Ready to uu Send ?? '* ' "*? ???! J cane (or (2.M. rum a home supply co. chotii. pa. 'PALCO??-5 R A N if L ATED a m n ?wiir For fin* taandering. Will work wonder* la your washing machine. 10 Ik cam 30# per lb. Ill Ik Onus ........ 25# per lb. ORDERFOB Send check or money order to ? PAL PRODUCTS CO. t BROOKLYN 32, N. Y. ^ U ?2? i&tSlZ' Thaaaarcaaiimulialghta worn taodoa knapa you inia-ara foil naa wakuful tha liardcr you try to alaapT Thoaa daya wben trnaa ? la maku fou irritabla and iumpy ?nra you craokiar and mora raalli whan you trj ta fight tha baling? Mian Alam^ta can hatp you on daya and nigUa U? thaaa. It km buna making good ? ?M* uaora than 80 yaura. F* ?ftCT1?N-uaa only dj^!V agjkum. Cat M Una . Kara I ma at your drag ? lata *?. TS? ? Liquid. H Ik SI. Milan Labara- Esl km. Inc.. Xlkhatt. I ' I d CROSS TOWN Bv RjlunJ Cov BOBBY SOX ?? Maftr Uab "The trouble with all these books on child psycbolory is they're all written by adults!" NAINCY WHERE W IN TO BRUSH 1 ARE YOU IV.. MV TEETH /? GOING. / v <3* fi wmm1 By Ernie Bmhmiller DON'T WASTE THE TOOTH PASTE^^ MUTT AND JEFF ncy. mui i / if DID you READ S THSM0TT4 JEFFl COMIC STRIP IN | nUTT ANUOfcrF ' COMIC STRIP?. I weu, ik -me first picture Lmru= JEFF COMES IN AND . CAVS,'HE* MUTT.' DlO VOU/ READ THE MUTT AND (o ilEFF COMIC STRIP / \ thenmuttTi says.- ) *muttan6 c jeff comic ?hen jeffsa/s,"*jpllin] rHE first PvrruRE uttle \ IEFF COMES IN AND SAtfa) HEX MUTT.' DIDYoU READ J ' THE MUTT AND JEFF (-* ;oMWI STRIP IN TODAY&J PAPER?*-THEN VOU /tfSfli seea close-up of i-jji? ?LITTLE JEFF. [ Tgir HE'S good/ ; /? By Bud Fisher l \ 1 -AMU IM IHfc I.A3 I picture jeff is ON THE FLOOR with a black eye , WHICH MUTT GAVE S HlMJ 8UT HE / DOESNT MIND iT AT AU-J HE'S A GOOD-NATURED J \ LITTLE r~~TT , -isuy< ? LITTLE REGGIE / WONOER WHERE RUMPUSAI 'IS? IVE COT TO BURN THE I LEAVES AND HE LOVES A J\ VBONRREJ/"~V-\ ' OH WELL I GUESS ^ ILL HAVE TO GO J AHEAD WITHOUT f RUMPUS ' ?rtfvw n ^TtrfK I n M M JITTER n?in ? I By Arthur Pointer REG'LAR FELLER X ^O.H> ?*. I KNOW Nr- ." / HUMAN NACM4JRE, \ / , PRETTY VKU, AN > [ (M 5UWS MY ??OTMC(l VJtLL FALL FOR TMIS/J ^ " I" ? 1 ^ VIRGIL (TSkSWEU.OEAL.-V WR3PUKES -*XJ SELL * VOWS I) MAOkZlUCS SueSCBOTOM ANO [ *VLBeOLAO WU?TW??y BTAXE aso > sP?STOL FUEE / I CAM 6feT TH* / I THESE OMS--FUU- a r oFNown&eur f] S BLACkMML AND / m?iBQ*'EgyJ /IV6CADKVSOW ) I IS STIU.TDO / / KWNOTOKNOM \ [ Alf^nwe. ABOUT ) By Gene Byrne* i ? f these buhputv ( ml too hba-vt for. "~x a la.' feller lixt you, ) /wttdyvi scram off ak1 play j i n somewheres ? ^ rjfuysflrvv rtx take care) ueetispp^t [sy-7 5*1 By Len Kleu ^ S B 1 / tcR-xxrpuwi TDSUeSCe^EID { TMSMA6AZINE- J w *OUJDNT / X.vou ? i SILENT SAM ez~i By J?gIUy? COME short while back, one of the leaders in college football asked your correspondent to name the 15 leading coaches in the country. The only answer we could think of in a given time limit was this: "The 15 coaches who have the best ma terial." There is little questioning the fact that for the season of 1946, Red Blaik of Army deserved his award, due largely to the fact that Red and his staff carried Aripy three years without a defeat. Time and again we have been asked to rank the coaches in order, i This is an impossi- | Indiana, Neely of Bierman Rice, Butts of Geor gia, McKeever of Cornell, Kale of Duke, Snavely of Nortb Carolina, Odell of Tale, Le Brucherie of U.C.L.A., Bierman of Minnesota?but why keep on? This is only a partial list, where, if given the same material and the same schedules, lnck would have to write the story. I can say this. There is no bunch connected with sport that gives as much time, thought, worry and com plete concentration as football coaches give. They brood by day and night. An ankle, a shoulder, a knee or a back can make all the difference in the world. Those in front figure they must stay there. The losers must win a game or two. There is a big difference in material from time to time but the old grads and the public at large never consid er this. They look only to the final scores. Such coaches as Red Drew of Mississippi, Red Sanders of Van derbilt and Paul Bryant of Kentucky may be unknown nationally, but they are as good as the best with what they have. 'A Coaches' Coach' There may be a better coach than Dick Harlow of Harvard?but who is he? Neyland of Tennessee can keep pace with anyone. Jock Suth erland was the coaches' coach in col lege until he came over to pro ranks. Spend a few days with Sieve Owen and Greasy Neale, in or out of sea son, and you get part of the answer ?fall, winter, spring and summer? they're always talking and thinking football, still playing over games they lost. Lonnie Stagg at 84 was still in harness this last season, reluc tant to retire. J-onnie was a star at Yale, 60 years ago. With all the tears they shed and all the moaning they give the world, it is almost impossible to shake them loose with out using a grenade. Tour correspondent more than once has ducked the opportunity of picking or trying to pick the 18 best coaches of an time. Looking back to something over 40 years we'd say that four of tbe best were Pop Warner, Knute Kockne, Hurry-up Tost and Percy Hanghton. Pop Warner gave football more on the technical side than anyone else, including the single and double wing, a system still just as effective as the T. ble Job. Look over just * few from the list ? Neyland of Tennessee, Blmik of Army, Harlow of Harvard, Little of Columbia, Crisler of Michigan, Thom as of Alabama, Leahy of Notre Dame, McMiUin of Colorful Yost Yost gave football its first flare of coaching color and Michigan its first great college football record? E8 victories in five years, blemished only by a tie with Minnesota, before Chicago broke the string in 1905. Knute Rockne brought to football its greatest combination of coaching ability, human interest and person ality. Rock, in addition to being a great coach, was also the game's star personal contribution when it came to human contact. Bob Znppke of Illinois brought to football coaching the added gifts of philosophy and humor. Zap had more color than two rainbows. One of his best friends was the late How ard Jones of Yale and Southern Cal ifornia. No two men were ever fur ther apart as human beings. But they were fine coaches and close pals. Haughton of Harvard today is a greatly underrated coach. Cold, hard, austere, he was one of the greatest. A star tactician and tech nician, Haughton was probably the best of all in discipline. As Tack Hardwick told me once, "If Haugh ton told Harvard to lump off a 100 foot cliff and he would catch us? we'd all jump. And Percy would catch us." Character Builders The thousand, at least a thousand, football coaches we've met and known in the last 40 odd years, have made an almost unbelievable con tribution, not only to sport, but also ' to the good of the nation at large. \ Not all of them, of course. But the 1 big malority have turned out a great job in the way of training. Instruc tion, discipline and, if you'll pardon the phrase, "character building." Did you ever know Dan McGugin or Dannie SUggT Ask their play ers, many of them now gray er bald. To prevent windows from stick ing, rub a little floor wax in the window sash groove. To remove the metml base of an electric light bulb that has broken in the socket, push a cork into the base and turn it. Winter window wishing is made a lot easier by adding denatured alcohol to the water to prevent freezing. Wipe quickly with crushed tissue paper. 4 Fish Net with Arm Holes For arctic wear, to keep out the bitter cold, the regular army has adopted a string vest devised by Norwegian fishermen to provide an air space between the body and out side clothing. The G.I.S have dubbed it "a flab net with arm holes." JUST^P Fact Finding Mother?More pudding, Jimmyt Your eyes are bigger than your stomach, child. Jimmy ? That doesn't seem reasonable, mother. Let us exper iment and either establish or dis prove the assertion definitely. Half In, Half Out Woman (on telephone)?I sent my little boy to your store for two pounds of plums and I got only a pound. Your scales must be wrong. Fruit Dealer?My scales are all right, madam. Have you tried weighing your little boy? Solid Advice Psychiatrist?the thing for you ^ to do is to forget about your> troubles and bury yourself in your work. Man?Gosh, and me a concrete mixer. Practical Instruction For the Home Nurse A LONG with her counties other ** duties. Mother frequently must serve as home nurse. Whether it's treating baby's colic or sponge bathing a feverish patient, she has to know all the answers. ? ? ? Don't let emergencies find you unpre pared. Learn what to do for jammed fingers, frostbite; how to care for post operative patients; how to nurse Junior through a bout of measles or another contagious disease. In our 40-page booklet. "Practical In struction for tbe Home Norse," a regis tered nurse tells you all you need to know. Send 25 cents (coin) to Weekly Newspaper Servtee. 243 W. 17th St., New York 1L N. Y. Print your name, address, booklet title. dash m fiatwiiis.Tv Jml Beware Coughs free Maaeo coMs That Hang On CrenmnWor reheTos promptly lit cause It goes right to the seat ot the - trouble to help looeull and expel I? II germ laden phlegm, and aid nature ' r' 11 to soothe and heal raw, tender. In- f filmed bronchial mucous mem branes, Tell your druggist to sell yoa a bottle of Creomulalon with the un derstanding you must like the war It ? qrdckly allays the cough or yoa are to have your money bach. CREOMULSION for Coughs. Chest Colds. Bronchitis Chang* t* CALOXI for th* tonic *U*ci on your smii* UtilwlCdw?rh>w??r?l lHd(anmtla...brli|M ?II cfa* Mori kum of TMI 2 a **cu iacratim to Cabs wfcito'kaTl telle jj^S?5C3 ?>" .
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 9, 1947, edition 1
6
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