The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, December 22, 1955, Page 6, Image 6

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OUR BOARDIHG HOUSE with Major Hoopte
OUT OUR WAY
F6AD. KAKTHA TW& THOUGHT OP 1
CSViS THIS SwAMLIke CBEATURE)
ALWOST CA'bT A PALLOt'AAV
cucistwas vooe BUYING A
DP6SSED TulOey WAS AN j
INSPIRATION
VOO WOTlCED THB
FOWL'S AFFeCTlOlO,
FOLLOWING ME-
ASOUT,
THE
YARD ?
A SHIP TfCHf?lST-l
IP,DRAT
WHAT. 40 LAU6H6? WHAT FOR i WE'VE N
1 HARPlV AlsfveOPV 7 fT ALU IW thcomic&i
LAUGHS aROunP OR TV OR MtTv'E, OR -
MgRe ANYMORE V MEARP IT OM THRAPO" J
I AT TME'R WOR" J V. THERE'S JOTMiMe J
V T& LIKE A J NEW TO LAUOH AT.'
THE DEAP PANS Xf ri1,"i
BUDDIES
OELL, REGPiROUESS OF WHAT 1 THIUK
OP HER FATHER. LITTLE ELLIE
CERTAIUL1 14 ft HOUEVI
Thauk sou, Folks,
FOB A OERf GRAMP
DIUOER bod
EOEuioa. vhsht!
CAPTAIN EASY
'1
BOOTS VOOX. KID, tDU'T PERMMs BOT 1 3(3
WOO STICK VOOR. CHIO HAoe A FEEUUS jSf.j
OUT UV4EO fOO I THAT THI0S3 bXLL KM
1UU1TED ELLIE TO xv UORK OOT JUST (raTfif
RETURN) IF... I -1 FIOE gy; , fjyjjj
"WW-, a , 9 : - 5 jmiUHlLVl
.Car. 1M b NU Sni. Im. t. M. I
BUT, CAKLA..4IWC6 WOWPAV'S
Zeswr "N a holipay, these strip
f - '"hT I IAEAN It ARC DEADLINE? TOMORROW!
i'jf PAP... PICK. FlUeV. 1 CAW BARELY MAKE IT! ,
Rf letters out of rpr , . , Trfr
THERE ALWAYS
some txcueei
WELL. gESINkllWO
TODAY HW,WHAT
THIS FKOm A BOS"
KUBLISHSKf,
V OH. LORPY..I FORGOT fTTt Al) TO LAT rT A5IDE
THAT! ITCAIA6 WHEN TILL I PULLEPOIITOF
I I WAS CRITICALLY THE JAW'. AMD IT'S
J BEHIND SCHEDULE- FATAL FOR ME TO
BARELY K6EP1MS W I POSTPONE-I
TON KUBLISHEKJVHEAP HBOVB WATER. TWel fNB,
6IX LETTERS FROtt R0YC6
CALVIN, OF THAT FIRM, OVER
A TWO-MONTH PERlOPl WERE
you in A jaw yrzz'
lVf VOE
Y&w-1 sVCARLA!
MARTHA WAYNE
OH.IFOMLVVOUCOULO
HAVE SEEN VDUC FACES,
GOSHX MWTHV.m'
OH, IF OMLV VOU COULO J BU.V, TT9 TIME FOl? BEO I
VIC FLINT
, L VeAH,TH(S(9r
I BOWL. WHO?VHATS 1
.ASM
possum; eeowue. Hey are vouf
WENT THROUGH A -V WE'LL
eaouwp flooh wiwpow) close in
WITH A SLUS OP MINE ANJP
PLEP PEAR ANP WHEN COM&
I TURNED AV HfiAO EVEEV
FOR lA SECOND.. 7 INCH OF
THE AREA.'
mi : v
BUGS BUNNY
3W 0 ' I HOUSEVEETEE WE"J SjSMi V
T
II I 1 ix"
ALLEY OOP
CP
1 yyn.jiwi ii jiiji hi .
f I I, Ti5afii
Ol;Y. if I've Tall CiShT.
(30T TGO LOOKV OOP, VVTi'RT.
ALL OVfcR AN REAPV
ItTO LAND- I IF VOU
GCAPE FOR MV WJE
HORSE. LETS
T.FT AT IT
,-'-fV.
I I KfV AX?I
Li-J WHAT I
.OF COURSE HE J 1 I ...BUT NOW5 TM A
WELL. DOES MY THATS (SENTLEMAM. I'VE
i-YOU STARS. HE TH' OLD NO NEED TO EN
DO WANT ) NEVER OOP TOU'RE I CUMBER MYSELF.
PONT I GOES ANY-V TALKING WITH SUCH
WHERE WITH I ABOUT
.OUT THAT
am
FRECKLES & HIS FRIENDS
fm
!. i T V THIS AlVXir-YOLl BE-
: I" H N ' ? : ( TlJATS RIOHr, f
Toby amdY Fbit a
Jhave YEAR?
BtEN you
ENfaAOEp I MAVFWr
FOR A KNOWN
YLAR J HER. SIX ,
Ira
" we MADe rr .
ReTKOACTlVEA-
r cf. tMi i wtA w t. M. t. . pu en.
Mens Clothes Have Changed
Greafly in Lasf 25 Years
NEW YORK (UP) Twenty-five
years ago men had di-aped shape!
and dixxpy six-ks.
Their clothes have changed al
most as much as women's, but
with less fanfare. Apparently men
just packed away their knickers
with their old kit bags and forgot
em, I
Now a 25th anniversary edition !
of Apparel Ails, a men's store
magazine, has traced the changes
in 196 remember-when pages. It
gives women a rare chance to
tease men about changing styles,
since their male wardrobes have
changed in many ways similar to
women's style trends.
Men have removed some of their
shoulder padding, stopped indent
ing their waistlines so sharply,
lengthened their jackets, tapered
their trousers and gone in for
more sports clothing. One men's
clothing company president wrote
in tlie magazine that he was
laughed out of his club 25 years
ago when he appeared in pastel;
Palm Beach knickers. Now men.
wear pastel shorts. '
A number of men that day ob-
BE SURE! !
Don't Wait 'Til The
LAST MINUTE...
ORDER PIES
For Christmas
EARLY ! !
PEDERSON'S
DONUT SHOP
ESQ
taste treat!
makes all
CHEESE dishes better
THE LOW CALORIE
ALL-PURPOSE CHEESE LOAF
fillip $
2 lb. family Lt lor yowr 4nctot
nal 4What, Iwixhai. hal or told tnotki.
tidal, mail i, ipiaadt In lIHy. Whn-
Chf O.IIghl. About half Iho otoflt
I ragvlor (hot.
Wgpakonata, Ohio
viously had trouble keeping up
their socks. One advertisement
sliowed a slick-haired fellow on one
knee before -a disdainful maiden.
"He'd be in the market for a sol
itaire today if his socks had been
as smooth as his wooing," the
caption stated. They suggested
garters. 1
The draped suit was a waist
hugging number with square shoul
ders and wide trousers. Double-
breasted," of course. No man 25!
years ago ever felt really dressed
up without a double-beasted suit.
I lorn burgs and derbies were the
hats of the hour for Wall Street
successes of that day. And for
"(Mr. Average," one company sug
gested an off-the-face hat with
medium curl brim called 'The
Drape." It was a cross between
a snap brim and a Homburg..
By the late 1930's men wore gay
glen plaid suits, tweed jackets with
narrow corduroy slacks and more
single-breasted suits.
Then they went into the cuffless
trouser era of wartime and the
military-style trench coats They
stopped wearing matching vests,
went in for more tweed over
coats.
Three out of five shirts men buy
now are sports shirts, and the
number of neckties in the average!
man s closet has doubled or tripled
in the past 25 years. Men bought
15 million paii-s of slacks in 1931
when they were considered work
clothing, and buy nearly four times
that many now for leisure wear.
Almost nobody owned a sports
jacket 25 years ago, and now eight
million are produced annually.
"The bold look," as the men's,
'new look" is called, has more
to do wilh the variety of colors
and clothes a man can wear today
than the actual shock effect of his
appearance. Man has come a long
way in clothes freedom in 25 years.
even though he's been keeping
quiet about it.
Servt iasy-to-Dlgtst
CHIP STEAKS
Shop at . . .
Stover-LeBlanc
6 & H Green Stamps
You'll find many,
many specials for
Christmas at...
Slover-LeBlanc
Where You Get
S & H Green Stamps
6 the Bend Bulletin, Thursday, December 22, 1955
SWEETIE PIE . by Nadine Selr-sr
5 "Pl
"Stop singing 'Anchors Aweigh and go tell your mother,
to call a plumber!"
Gloria Playing Agrippina
In Italian Film About Nero
By GLORIA SWAN&)V
, Written For United Prewi
ROME "My Son Nero," the
Italian movie in which I play
Nero's mama (Agrippina), has at
last got under way.
To say that I am the most be
wildered person in Rome is an
under statement. It is my first
Italian film and it is in color and
cinemsacope an all-round new
experience for me.
Nero is played by Alberto Sordi
(a young Italian Bob Mope, so I
am told), Poppea. Nero's "girl
friend," by the French actress
Brigitte Bardot, and Seneca, the
philosopher, by Vittorio de Sica of
directorial as well as aoting fame.
Steno (Stefano Vanzina), our
director, is a Dint-sized man with,
imagine, the patience of Job. He
knows only a few words of Eng-
ADMIRAL
T.V. For '56 With
Top Front Tuning
MAYTAG APPLIANCE
STORE
722 Franklin Ph. 274
KOIN TV CHANNEL 6
THURSDAY
4.30 Mr MiK.n
4:l5-linrt(er Bill Cartoon Tim
J iv-K.il Dunning Hour
S 00 Mr. Woihennn
8: OS Sinrtscpne
6: 10-Npwi parade
6: IS I)UK KitwiinlJ NfWi
6: IS Sat. I'reaton of Yukon
7-!-.tchnnv Ciiraon Show
7:301 Search Tor Ailventure
8:00 Kyb Cummlmts SlbtW
8 30 -1tm
9:30-Fur Star Ptayhouae
Hno-Cinrnh'titlal Kile
10 30 City rik
lU'SS Showtlmr on Sl
FRIDAY
t 00 -Mama
.s 30 -our Mi Br"'lw
8' 30 Panorama Pacific
8' IS- -Irs tMn to Kfluct
9 mi -Valiant Lady
9 IS -Lnv of Uf
9 30"Srvh F'r Tomorrow
9.IS--uldirui Light
10 00 Armchair Theatre
10:-Lov tory
U 0O-Hotrt Q. Lu1l
11:30 Art Un Metier Houf party
12 00 lug Pavff
12:30 lklt Cnit'y Show
1 00 Hrlnhter Day
l:lS-crt Storm
l'SO Hi Y.Hir Account
1 no KOI Kitchen
S'M-Strtkt It Rlc
S W fiarry Moore Show
ran Mr Maw
4: 4S Cartoon Time
5 00 Red Dunnlnj Hour
4:00 Mr. Weatherman
8: OS Sportaccne
6: 10 News paraoe
6: 15 Doug Edward Newt
6:30 Chuck Foster Newscene
6: -IS John Kieran Kaleltkmcope
7:00 Camera Four
7:30 Person lo Peraon
8:m-Mama
8:30 Our Min Bmok
9:00 The Crusader
9: 30 Playhouse at Stars
10:00 The Lineup
10:30 Portland WreaUlng
i U:30 ShowUme on Six
KVAL-TV CHANNEL 13
THURSDAY
4:304:80 Date
S: 00 Big Roundup
5:45 The Newi
5:50 Sporta Headline
5:S5-Weather Report
8- 00 Annie Oakler
6 30 Tli Powerhand Story
6:4S PatU Pane
7:00 Western Marahal
7: W Amos 'n' Andy
8:00 You Bet Your Life)
fl-30 Waterfront
9:00 Dragnet
30 TV TheaUT
10:00 Lux Video Theatre
11:00 Chamutonihlp Bowling
FRIDAY
3: i5-Of aU Thing
3 LV-Mnime
4 30-Roifrf
5 00 Big Roundup
S: 30 Birthday Party Time
5:45 The New
5 50 Sports Headline
5:54 Weather Report
ft oo-Waich Miner Wizard
6: 30 Sportsman Club
6.45 Let t Go Ftihuig
7 00 Ca-akade of Sports
7 45 Piano-Organ Punch
8 00 The Great GUdersleeve
S 30 Cross -Roads
9 OO-TKA
9:15 Road to Adventure
9: 30 Highway Patrol
lOOO-Jusilce
10 30 Texas Ratalln' -11:00
Bpotilil U SWpenM
Cost of Living
Edges Upward
WASHINGTON (UP) The cost
of living edged up again last
month.
The government report said to
day that price rises on 1956 autos
and other items more than offsel
declining food prices.
The report also showed that av
erage factory -take home pay
reached a new record level for
the third straight month and that
the purchasing power of average
factory pay also set a now record.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics
said its consumer price index
climbed .1 of 1 per cent to reach
115 per cent of average 1W7-49
prices ior tne lirst time since
August, 1954.
Deputy BLS Commissioner Ary-
ness Joy Wickens said the price
picture is still "one of considera
ble stability" despite creeping in
creases in the last half of the
year. She said the outlook is for
"no marked change" in the index
over the next few months.
The BLS reported that the aver
age factory worker with three de
pendents earned $72.85 a week aft
er taxes in November. This was
about 80 cents higher than Octo
ber and 14.67 higher than in No
vember, 1954. More overtime as
well as wage Increases contributed
to the gain.
tish and the most used word in his
vocabulary is "patience." I can
now understand why he and other
Italian movie-makers so often use
this word on Americans working
over here.
In the American film industry,,
schedules are made to be adhered
to, as well as working, sleeping
and eating hours. And a scripV
which has taken months to. write
is a sacred document not to be
tampered with by every Tom,
Dick and Harry.
Here they have a casual, or let
us call it Latin, approach to all
these things. In fact, I don't think
they deeply worry about anything
and, as a consequence, ulcers,,
which head the list of Hollywood
maladies, are nil here.
I wrote an article about Italians
all taking off from 1 to 4 p.m. for
siestas. I should have added that -this
does not apply to the movie
industry. The first day I worked , .
until midnight. Tlie- cook-didn't
seem the least surprised or "lon
faced." The following morning it
was I who was long-faced because
I was awakened at 6:30 afU'r only
four and one-half hours sleep.
I had to be ready to face the
cameras again at 9:30 a.m. (If
Nero's mania looks bleary - eyed
and dug-up, you'll know why).
Neither Nero nor Poppea speaks
English. So none of us knows
what the other is saying.
You can just imagine the prob
lems this presents to the actors.
And even more strange is the fact
that the Italian actors are inclined
to ad lib, making up their own
dialogue as they go along!
All in all, Nero's American'
mother is having a heck of a time
holding her own but it's fun!
And I love them.
The Practical Gift
ELECTROLUX
$AQ75
Complete
BUY NOW
Price will Increase Jan. 1st.
Phil Philbrook
1304 E. 3rd. Ph. 1363J
Kesutered U. 8. PttL Oil.
;.,:ATtH.at WtMutuil Don Lm Broadcaiting System;:
If 10
Kitocyclefrj
TONIGHT'S PROGRAM
1:00 Uaoria) Haattar
C :16 Bonirm of Our Tlmafi
: 30 The Alexanders
6:45 Sam Hayes
6:54 Bob Grment Nw
7:00 Tip ofl Time
7:30 News
7:35 Evening Melodies
7 :B0 Kwntns Helodlai
7: 55 Camera Club
8:00 These The Humble
8:05 Memories In Melody
6:80 Eddla Ftshsr Stow
S: Musical Portrait
9:00 New
9 1 16 Fulton Lewta Jr.
9:10 Island SOTnada
9:45 Stan's Bandstand
10:00 Stan's Bandstand
.0 !0 0flelal DsUetira
11:00 Sign Off
FKI HAY, DKC S3..
6:00 Sign On
6:15 Triple T Ranch
.45 Farm Reporter
7:00 Frank Hemingway
7:16 Breakfast Oansj
7:30 Morning Melodies
7:40 New
7:46 Uorntnc ftofxndu
8:UUCUf Engle .New
6 JO North wart News
1 :2ft Kraft Firs New
6 :0 Bible InstitnU Boor
9:00 Bulletin Board
f:U6 Morning Special
9:15 Kraft Ne
9: 20--Morning Special
9:30 The Song at The Star
9 45 Top Tunes
I0:00-Nwspapraf the Air
10:15 Tello Tet
10:30 Fashion Trends
10 33 The Three Suns
10 40 Song of the Day
Ifl: 55 Northwest Nerg
1(1: 45 New
10:50 Kan About Town
11:00 Kraft New
11:05 Story Time
11 :80 Queen for ft Day
It :00 Noontime Melodies
IS stO i Today's Classifieds
12:16 Sporta Review
12:20 Noon Time Melodies
12 : 80 New.
12:46 Farmer Hoar
1:00 New of PrinevUle
1:06 Harry Jama-Betty Grab! Show
1 :4 Listening Time
2:00 Matinee Merryground
8:00 Musical Moment
8:16 Northwest New
8:10 Central Oregon New
8:25 Kraft Five Star News
3:30 Matinue Time
8:46 ToJIo Teat
4 :00 Popular Demand
4 :1S Frank Hemingway
4 :80 Here's the Answer
4: 45 Melody Way
6 :00 Tune Vendor
5:16 Sports Parade
5 :26 New
1:30 Melody Way
5:55 Kraft New
6:00 Gabriel Header
6.16 Les Paul-Mary Ford show
6:80 Dinner Melodies
6:30 Behind the Store
6 45 ftm Hayes
6: 55 Bob Greene
7:00 Eagle Notebook
7:30 News
7:35 Evening Melodies
7: 45 Remember When
7:50 Evening Melodies
9 00 Army Hour
8:30 SUn's Bandstand
9:00 News
9:15 Fulton Lewis Jr.
9:30 Stan's Bandstand
l "n-Oountempy
U.Ou-Slsn Off