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anaheim-gazette 1950-06-19

1950-06-19 · Anaheim Gazette · page 6 of 8 · OCR glm-ocr
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ALFRED HE HOBBY SHOPPE Colony BIRD HOUSE MATERIALS AND DIRECTIONS FOR EASY ASSEMBLY 2.98 COLONY BIRD HOUSE GEE, CAN'T YOU GET IT TOGETHER, UNCLE ALFRED? WASTE OAKY DOAKS NO SOONER HAD COUNT RAOUL DE RAOUL ARRIVED IN UNCERTAINIA TO COMPETE IN KING CORNY'S TOURNAMENT THAN HIS FERVOR WAS SUDDENLY DAMPENED... BUT NOW... WHO PUSHED YE INTO TH' FOUNTAIN, YER HIGHNESS? SIR HOAKY OATS! OH, YE MEAN SIR OAKY DOAKS! HE'S KING CORNY'S FAVORITE KNIGHT! I DO NOT CARE WHAT HE EES! FOR WHAT HE DID I WEEL KEEL HEEM! THAT'S BE A B JOB, Y HIGHN SCORCHY SMITH SCORCHY, WITH AN ASSIST FROM PIXY, TRIES EVERY TRICK TO INSURE A SAFE (?) LANDING IN BINX! YOU'LL RUN OVER PIXY!! IF WE RUN OVER PIXY, WE RUN OVER THE EDGE OF THE CREVASSE! STOP! STOP! I'M THE DEAD END!! SCORCHY SMITH SCORCHY, WITH AN ASSIST FROM PIXY, TRIES EVERY TRICK TO INSURE A SAFE (?) LANDING IN FABULOUS (!) OPHIIR FOR SUDAIR'S DC3 AND THE ELLIS PARTY... BINX! YOU'LL RUN OVER PIXY!! IF WE RUN OVER PIXY, WE RUN OVER THE EDGE OF THE CREVASSE! STOP! STOP! I'M THE DEAD END!! DICKIE DARE DAN HAD A MESSAGE FROM THE BANK-HED OVERDRAWN HIS ACCOUNT BY $7,300.00 I'M A FOUR-NOSED FOOL IDIOT-FISH TOOK THIS JOLT TO MAKE ME REALIZE THAT I'VE TOSSED AWAY NEARLY A MILLION OF OUR MONEY, OF YOUR MONEY YOU MUST DESPISE ME-HATE ME HERE'S SCRAMLED AN' COFFEE YOU COULDN'T IT, DAN, YOU IN LOVE THE ADVENTURES OF PATSY YOW! "A HOMER FOR SWATTO! THAT MAKES NUMBER 40! AT THIS RATE,HE'LL CATCH BABE RUTHS RECORD BY THE FOURTH OF JULY! WHAT'S ALL THE SHOUTING ABOUT? GET HE GREAT SWIT HIS FORTH HE' IS A NEW MARK! OH, DIANA! GUESS I'LL SHAVE NOW AND GET READY TO GO TO MY MEETING... OH, DIANA! GUESS I'LL SHAVE NOW AND GET READY TO GO TO MY MEETING... TUM DE DUM TOONERVILLE FOLKS Fontaine Fox KEEN TEEN ED WORTLE WANTS TO MAKE HIS WIFE DISCONTINUE IT. HOLD YER HYDROGEN BOMB DRILL A MINIT! THEY WAS A COUPLA MICE DOWN IN THAT CISTERN YESTIDDY! AGE 6 Anaheim Gazette, Monday, June 19, 1950 COLONY BIRD HOUSE GIRL RYMAN COPYRIGHT, 1950, MICCLURE NEWSPAPER SYNDICATE FOR WHAT HE DID I WEEL KEEL HEEM! THAT'S GONNA BE A BIG JOB, YER HIGHNESS! AND WHEN I HAVE KEELED HEEM I WEEL BE KEENG CORWY'S FAVOREETE KNIGHT! ALSO THE HUSBUM OF PREENCESS POMONA! STOP! STOP! IM THE DEAD END!! PHEW! SHE STOPPED!! JUNE ROSES By Peggy Roberts Pattern No. R2167 Graceful sprays of roses, embroidered in glowing colors in simple cross-stitch add an unusual, fresh note to any bedroom. This set makes a very special gift for a bride. Pattern Envelope No. R2167 contains hot-iron transfers for 4 designs, two about 4 by 13½ inches and about 7½ by 10 inches; color chart for embroidering and stitch illustrations. To obtain this pattern send 20c in COINS, giving pattern you name, address and ber to Peggy Roberts, heim Gazette, 828 Miss San Francisco 3, Calif. Just what you've befor... the BIG new NEEDLEWORK NEWS full of fascinating designing four gift patterns structures printed in Special features...neer how" and exciting on what's-new-to-ma STOP! STOP! IM THE DEAD END!! WOOD PHEW! SHE STOPPED!! YOU MUST DESPISE ME-HATE ME HERE'S SOME SCRAMLED EGGS AN' COFFEE—YOU COULDN'T HELP IT, DAN, YOU WERE IN LOVE. YOU'VE STILL A MILLION BUCKS CREDIT IN YOUR ACCOUNT WITH ME! WHAT? SAY THAT AGAIN, SLOWLY WHAT'S ALL THE SHOUTING ABOUT? GET HEP, KID! THE GREAT SWATTO JUST CLOUTED HIS FORTIETH ROUND-TRIPPER! HE'S A SHOO-IN TO SNAG A NEW MARK! IS THAT SO?? WHAT DOES IT MEAN IN ENGLISH? JUST YELL, PAD, IF MY THINGS SHOULD HAPPEN TO BE IN YOUR WAY. Pattern No. R2167 Graceful sprays of roses, embroidered in glowing colors in simple cross-stitch add an unusual, fresh note to any bedroom. This set makes a very special gift for a bride. Pattern Envelope No. R2167 contains hot-iron transfers for 4 designs, two about 4 by 13½ inches and about 7½ by 10 inches; color chart for embroidering and stitch illustrations. To obtain this pattern, send 20c in COINS, giving pattern you name, address and ber to Peggy Roberts, heim Gazette, 828 Miss San Francisco 3, Calif. Just what you've befor... the BIG new NEEDLEWORK NEWS full of fascinating designing four gift patterns structions printed in Special features... need how" and exciting on what's-new-to-m a twenty-five cents (25c) Neighborly Neighbors GOSH!!! THAT DERN THING I THOUGHT WAS A SHOOTING STAR---IT'S A FLYING SAUCER! IT SURE IS--AND IT'S LANDING!!! I'D BETTER HIDE!! PETERS SCRAMBLED BEHIND SOME ROCKS AND WATCHED THE GIANT DISC COME IN A SLOW WHIRRRRRING STALL AND SETTLE GENTLE ONTO THE SAND, STOPPING NOT SO FEET FROM OUR WIDE-EYED EMMISSARY_ TODAY'S CROSS-WORD PUZZ JUST YELL, DAD, IF MY THINGS SHOULD HAPPEN TO BE IN YOUR WAY. KEEN TEENS By Stookie Allen SHOE SHINER! A YEAR AGO AN UNEMPLOYED, DISCOURAGED YOUNG ACTRESS TRUDGED ALONG BROADWAY WHEN SHE SPIED A SHOE SHINE BOX IN A SHOP... I'M GOING TO BEAT THIS ACTING RACKET IF I HAVE TO SHINE SHOES, SHE SAID, AND THATS WHAT SHE DID! WORKING THE THEATRICAL DISTRICT SHE MET PRODUCERS SHE COULDN'T GET IN TO SEE BEFORE. THEY LIKED HER SPUNK, GAVE HER BIG TIPS AND BIT PARTS. LOIS MADE $6,000 IN A YEAR! AND IS NOW IN A MOVIE! HORIZONTAL 1 Fraud 5 Urn 9 Greek letter 12 Temporary star 13 Legendary founder of Troy 14 Resin 15 Belladonna lily 17 Examine 18 Door 19 Social adroitness 21 Arab kingdom 23 Bumpkin 26 Dazzling 30 Explosive miselle 31 Purpose 32 Scoff 34 Arikara (Am. Indian) 35 Christen 37 Conducive to health 39 Play 41 Matron 42 Bass saxhorn 44 Fish 48 Pronoun 50 Uproot and destroy Slip Jungle beast Elire Tiny Serf Repose VERTICAL 1 Crispness 2 Man (L) North Caucasian language European swallow Actors cast in parts opposite to the heroes Everyone Please Dissertation Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: DETER SAT BAQ OVOLO ELA PRO MANIA NEPTUNE TAASBO SERRED BLISTER TONES EON VATER STEEVE ORNATE LEROT LIN ECLAT NENACED SHZNE EMILY TENDRIL ADOBE ONE ACE TENOR PAN NET ARENA Thrills, Chills, Hard Work Are Race Wife's Lot (Continued from Page 5) race track. These are some comfort when you're home in an easy chair talking about racing. When you're out in the stands watching the cars careen by, they lose their power to convince. Compensations Yet there are compensations. Mrs. Cantrell discounts a lot of anxiety when Bill streaks across the line ahead of the pack. Then it's a proud wife that watches him appease the autograph hounds and sundry admirers. It's also good to be up in the stands and hear people talking about her husband's driving ability. It's good when they join her in cheering him on to win. Then there are the trophies, mementoes of track triumphs. Since 1940, Mrs. Cantrell has added a lot of them to the collection at their 532 S. Ohio street home. With the heavy racing schedule, the many trophy dashes, the runoffs and special events, she is hard pressed to find room for all the awards. The house is full of them now, and yet she's had to dispose of at least an equal number to make room for the latest ones. Dash Victories Most of them represent victories in trophy dashes. Others are more impressive, like the big one that commands the mantlepiece now. It's there because Bill won the United Racing Association championship in 1947, racking up more lap points than any other previous driver in the circuit. This and others like it make the race wife's lot a happier though not a less trying one. But in addition to watching and waiting, there is work for the Hello! Anaheim (Continued from Page 4) ing from some newly-met weed (with hands too busy and dirty to scratch!!), aching in never-before-exercised muscles, and irrigating the just-watered trees next-door much more efficiently than our own thirsty ones. I solemnly decided nobody, just plain nobody better ever comment on the high price of oranges to me! And what was the mister's comment?? He chuckled. . . "Bet that was fun!" said ignorant he. Next time it's his turn. The school board in Cleveland, Ohio, is considering adding an hour to the school day for the kids to do their homework. A high school principal in East Cleveland has already ruled that in the fall an additional 30 minutes for study will be scheduled—All this because television is so rapidly replacing the lamp-lighted study table at home. You've read clear to here eager to learn about fashions for all. (Well, there must be some reason!) Anyway fall fashions include a straight but not skimpy (complicated, huh?) silhouette with lower waistlines and — shorter skirts. Your fall suit will have a slightly arched hipline (!) and wider, flatter shoulder pads. (Vice versa for me.) Dangling earings will be dangling all over. Dark berry colors shot with metallic thread, foggy neutrals (oh goody!) and a dash of Paris-inspired orange will be choice. . . But for canning apricots and taking the kids on a picnic, you'll be stylish in anything you have or can buy for $2.98. MAGIC CLIPS—A Paris jeweler offers these adornments of rubles and diamonds, platinum-mounted, but does not announce how the novelty jewels remain in position. in COINS, giving pattern number, you name, address and zone number to Peggy Roberts, The Anaheim Gazette, 828 Mission Street, San Francisco 3, Calif. Just what you've been waiting for ... the BIG new book of NEEDLEWORK NEWS! Chock-full of fascinating designs, including four gift patterns with instructions printed in the book. Special features ... needle "know-how" and exciting information on what's-new-to-make. Send twenty-five cents (25c) in coin. Just what you've been waiting for... the BIG new book of NEEDLEWORK NEWS! Chock-full of fascinating designs, including four gift patterns with instructions printed in the book. Special features...needle "know-how" and exciting information on what's-new-to-make. Send twenty-five cents (25c) in coin. Most of them represent victories in trophy dashes. Others are more impressive, like the big one that commands the mantlepiece now. It's there because Bill won the United Racing Association championship in 1947, racking up more lap points than any other previous driver in the circuit. This and others like it make the race wife's lot a happier though not a less trying one. But in addition to watching and waiting, there is work for the conscientious race wife to do. Mrs. Cantrell ranks as her husband's number one strategist and advisor. She knows driving inside and out, she knows Bill's car almost as well as he does. Her assignment is to keep tabs on driving tactics during the races and plan the best course of action for her husband. She also has to keep an ear open when Bill passes, to determine whether or not the car is running properly. Not that she can tell him what, if anything, is specifically wrong. But she knows immediately from the sound if things aren't exactly right. Reports Observations Between races, she goes into a huddle with Bill and reports her observations. It pays off in first places. Then too, she plays grease monkey when it comes time to repair the car. Work sessions in the family garage see Mrs. Cantrell right there with her husband. Like most drivers, Bill is an expert mechanic, does nearly all of the repair work on his car. All in all, it makes for a rugged existence, Mrs. Cantrell says. Midgets race six nights a week during the March-November season. They appear anywhere from San Diego to Sacramento. To make any headway at all, a driver has to race nearly every night. Mrs. Cantrell can't make all of the races, but she maintains a 75 per cent average. It means a lot of traveling. Then too, the home and family have to be looked after. Thirteen years in Anaheim, the Cantrell's are parents of two young ladies, Janice Sue, 11, and Lana Jean, 5. Mrs. Cantrell is a busy woman, to say the least. Racing in Blood Does she like it—the hustle, the hard work, the worry? Sure she does. People don't do their best unless they are busy. Besides, racing is in her blood, she guesses. She was a race fan before she ever met her huband. The future? That's up to the Mr., she indicates. One while wider, flatter shoulder pads. (Vice versa for me.) Dangling earings will be dangling all over. Dark berry colors shot with metallic thread, foggy neutrals (oh goody!) and a dash of Paris-inspired orange will be choice. But for canning apricots and taking the kids on a picnic, you'll be stylish in anything you have or can buy for $2.98. Dorothy Dix (Continued from Page 1) to do something that he is not fitted for. He will be bored by uncongenial work and he will never cease to reproach his wife for having ruined his career. No woman who is not willing to wait until a man is ready to marry and who is not anxious for him to succeed in his career will make a good wife. Dear Miss Dix: Is there any cure for a conceited husband? I am so tired of hearing mime brag about himself and entertain all our visitors by telling them how much he makes, and how great and wonderful he is. SARAH Answer: If there is any cure for conceited people, I do not know what it is. Criticism rolls off them like water off a duck's back. If you don't thing them the world's masterpieces they just set it down to your lack of intelligence. Your only consolation is that a man's vanity delivers him into your hands. A conceited man is as easily worked as a piece of putty. You can flatter him into anything. UCLA RECORD CLASS LOS ANGELES (UP)—The largest Senior class in its history—3586 student—was graduated yesterday by the University of California at Los Angeles. Nearly half are veterans. Honorary Doctor of Laws Degrees were conferred on Dr. Ralph Bunche, director of the Division of Trusteeship, United Nations; Mrs. Irene Taylor Heineman, retired assistant superintendent of education of California, and Bruno Walter, symphony conductor. Racing in Blood Does she like it—the hustle, the hard work, the worry? Sure she does. People don't do their best unless they are busy. Besides, racing is in her blood, she guesses. She was a race fan before she ever met her hubband. The future? That's up to the Mr., she indicates. Once in a while, like two weeks ago at San Bernardino, she gets the desire to ease up a little. But then she wants to see Bill go as far as he can. She's a race fan, remember? How far is far? Well, every driver has his eye on the big one, the Indianapolis 500-miler. Bill is no exception. And Mrs. Cantrell was never one to argue. NEGRO PASTOR PRESIDES REDLANDS (AP)—For the first time in the history of the Methodist church, a Negro Bishop will preside over a white conference today at the opening of the Annual Southern California-Arizona Methodist conference. He is Bishop Alexander P. Shaw, Baltimore, Md., former pastor of the Wesley church in Los Angeles. His selection was made at the request of conference pastors. Shaw's parents were slaves. LOS ANGELES (AP)—Los Angeles has replaced San Francisco as the distribution center for the Western United States, says the Chamber of Commerce. Wholesale transactions here in 1948 totaled $5,868,479,000 against $4,979,961,000 in the San Francisco-Oakland area, the local chamber said. In making ice, commercial plants use city water purified of its mineral content.