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I "T-. • ■ ' • - e* ;i. it* «* «•* *• ■ THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, S. C. — i ■ ' r Yt'i: ■ mm ■i m hun tor f :lie V ^hole f i 'amily SPARKY WATTS r AH-THERE’5 TH’ THIEVE5 //HO TOOK POC’f KAV MACHINE - WILL THEIR FACES BE REP AFTER THEV KISS THAT WINPSHIELP Sf By BOODY ROGERS HERE’S VOOR MACHINE, POC-THOSE SUYS WON’T BOTHER IT ASAIN/ BUT, SPARKV- THOSE MEN ARE FIFTH COLUMNISTS -I TOLP ’EM TO ONLY CHARGE THEMSELVES ONE MINUTE WITH TH’ RAYS— > \r WELL .THEY’RE 1 STILL PICKING GLASS OUT OF THEIR FACES WHERE I LEFT| ’EM — I’LL TAKE IT BACK/ By LEN KLEIS TO LET RALPH IN dflinninnnn^ \\Ywm\ REG’LAR FELLERS—Prompt Customers By GENE BYRNES IF A MAN BUILDS A BETTER, r .OUSETRAP THAN HIS NEIGHBOR., TH' WHOLE WORLD WILL BEAT A PATH TO HIS DOOR! rr WHAT SWELL ADVICE! AND HERE'S WHERE. I START BUI LOIN' TH' WORLDS BEST MOUSETRAP — THAT SAVIN' WAS RIGHT UP MV ALLEY! AN HERE COMES TH' WORLD AN 1 HIS . ^ UNCLE. SEATIN' \-^tfcKT DOWN MY DOOR ) IQjfr?, WITH HONORS AN' / RICHES AN’ SUCH! 2 By BOB KARP AD,DEAR, WILL- VVteAKtf-CDO you EMPTY THE I IT BUT I STILL. VACUUM BAG \THINI< YOU'RE FOR ME? X NEVER\OEUB«RAT»LY Seem able to get) helpless " IT ON AND OFP RIGHT. -Li. THE TROUBLE WITH >OU IS THAT you DON'T USE VOUR. HEAD-ABOUT MECHANICAL. THINGS/ THATS ALUyOJH GOTTA PO- iiHOtO \<Aj£P ^useyouR^ head a— -ouch/ 3N POP—An Apt Definition ,WE DONT WANT ANY HYPOCRITES HERE ! DO YOU KNOW WHAT A HYPOCRITE IS o jrp^rs.. YES ! A MAN WHO COMES ON PARADE , SMILING / by TH, Btl WfcitJV By J. MILLAR WATT — CROSS TOWN By Roland Coe ^'^T1aX S> * y . yt'tKir ‘He’s only a pap, bat he sure hates baby talk!” PRIVATE BUCK Bn Clyde Lewis Quaint Garden for Your Bed Linens AN OLD-FASHIONED garden, quaint and charming, blooms in natural colors on sheet and pil low cases. Worked mainly in lazy- daisy stitch. • • • You can have “story book” bed linens. Pattern 7102 has transfer of one 6% by 20}-j, two 5 l /4 by 15-inch motifs; edging instruction. ^ Due to an unusually large demand and current war conditions, slightly more time is required in filling orders for a few of the most popular pattern numbers. Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept. 564 W. Randolph St. Chicago 80, 111. Enclose 16 cents for Pattern No Name_ Address- Lowly Spiders Among Swiftest of the Swift v — 1 ■ ■ During an experiment some time ago a spider was timed to walk a hundred times its own length in a second. By compari son a man would have to travel at 400 miles an hour to equal this? Some birds, especially the div ing varieties, can touch terrific speeds. The average speed a man reaches when diving from a height of about 60 feet is 40 miles an hour, whereas the loon, a diving bird, surprised by the flash of a gun, can dive before the shot reaches it. One naturalist stated that he had timed birds to dive under water before the pellets from a gun peppered the surface. CORN, hakes &iuf. (jJah. (Bonddu (bid, JbuipL JJtsutL, . fcE.ally fInTt^Tx cflRm^n > £>RAND ORANGE PEKOE & PEKOE V T-€fl Y ‘Can’t we stop here, Sarge? I came right to work withoat breakfast!” CALLING ALL EXPERIENCED SEAMEN BACK TO SEA! #/ "The Need is Urgent, soys the High Command! 43,000 experienced sea men now working in shore jobs are vitally needed back on ships — if our fighting men are to get supplies to finish the job! ADMIRAL LAND! '‘Ships can’t sail without experienced men—and we just don't have enough men for our expanding Merchant Marine. If you have ever been a Mate, Bngineer, Radio Officer or “AB," your country needs you now!" "Up-Grading is Fast" say Mea Now at Sea! What are your chances for advancement in a shore job when the war ends? Read what this seaman says and you’ll get a hint of what the Merchant Marine offers I L. O. WAMHN, a Captain at 27, says: “I came up from Third Mate to Ship Master in three years because of the big oppor tunity now in the Merchant Marine. I know I’d never have made that rate of progress in a shore job." "The Future is Briaht," say Industry Leaders! Government heads, large shipping companies and union leaders agree that the postwar prospects for the Merchant Marine exceed anything ever before known. RRANK J. TAYLOR, Pres., American Mer chant Marine Institute: ‘‘With nearly every country in the world to be rebuilt* there is every reason to believe the Mer chant Marine will move into a great era of expansion after the war." ♦To si in up with the. Merchant Marine, report to your nearest War Shipping Administration Office, your maritime union, U, S. Employment Service, or wire collect to Merchant Marine, Washington, D. C. RECRUITMENT & MANNING ORGANIZATION ★ WAR SHIPPING ADMINISTRATION * Prepared by the War Advertising Council, Inc., with the cooperation of the Office of War Information and U. S. Maritime Commission. -rii V?v.'