The Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 19??-1984, August 27, 1936, Image 7

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    THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1936
THE HERMISTON HERALD, HERMISTON, OREGON.
A Lovely Frock for
Twelves to Twenties
WORLD’S BEST COMICS
Lighter Side of Life as Depicted by Famous Cartoonists and Humorists
THE FEATHERHEADS
Out of Lock
..Ex.K.homns...
wow!
—- HAVE To WORK LATE
AND I DONT HANE MY
KEY WITH ME—Ou’LL
- LEAVE IT IN THE -—-
/ MILK BOTTLE 2 —
A
FULL MILK
BOTTLE —
BoYs, i MEANT To
LEAVE AT TWELVE
AND NOW ITs
two - thirty — So-
i
GOTTA
Go
THE
FINE
OK- SCRAM
OURE
MI-I-ILK
MA-A-AN:
MILKMAN
THE
EMPTY ONE
WITH THE
■ KEY//
A
T ook
___
QsQUAw
- WHEN L
Ì
OUT ALL
NIGHT
PLAYING
POKER
AND You
CANT OPEN
(THE DOOR)
JasT _
( RAP r
S,MATTER POP— Best to Make a Pass at It—if It Walk»!
/ •
w
1933-B
MESCAL IKE
School Days
B, s. L. HUNTLEY
here !
OADGUMMIT:
GET AWAX* YOH
MILES by TH’
DAS OF TU
. WEEK — /
Swingin’ down the lane with a
bit of a zip and a full quota of
what it takes, this smartly simple
frock goes places without effort—
an engagingly youthful and chic
affair which can be made in a
trice (first cousin to a jiffy) and
make you the belle of the
campus.
Its simplicity is totally disarm­
ing, yet it has all the aplomb of
a professor in English — just one
of those frocks which can’t miss.
Delightfully cool and as chipper
as a breeze, it requires just seven
simple pieces in the making, in
any fabric from the A’s to the
Z’s. The yoke and sleeves cut in
one and the collar is just long
enough to take the prize.
Send for Barbara Bell Pattern
No. 1933-B designed for sizes 12,
14, 16 18 and 20—bust 32 to 38.
Size 14 requires 4 yards of 39-
inch fabric. Send 15 cents in
coins.
Send for the Fall Pattern Book
containing Barbara Bell well-
planned, easy-to-make patterns.
Exclusive fashions for children,
young women and matrons. Send
15 cents for your copy.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circle Pattern Dept., 149 9 9New
Montgomery Ave., San Francisco,
Calif.
HERE!
WHATCHA WANJTA DO J
NOW IS MULTIPLY TM “
I BUSHELS OF FERTATER:
BVn NOM BER —
1 OF MEN : —
ule
/ 21/77
— /
—5) AIT &e
AW2--.
by S. L. Huntley, Trade Mark Reg. U, 8. Pat. Office)
Fz Tsd.Ikpushlin.
FINNEY OF THE FORCE
HERE
Ol
DETAILED
BE
I—:
To
PARK DOOT/ AN
Ot FOIND A
UNIFORMED MON
• ALREADY OKI
wa DOoT/ // p
So-0
JEDGE
LIKE
THESE A" Mez AINT so
SUITS
TH EY
MAKE
US
HApPY T’BE
\ AWEARUI’
Gi
PARK WORKERS
WELL— I AIN’T
SHURE — SO
EP, 1
KIN tell
SANIN’— but D7A
KNOW WHY we
HAFTA
, THESE
WEAR
SUITS ?
boss
"
EZ
IN
‘OTHER.
FRUM
HERE/
.
TH’ PARRK /
O
LOAFERS
© Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
‘ALLUS
TELL A
MON IN
UNIFORM
BLT
EZ
Make the Best of It
However unfortunate a situation
may be there is always some way
of deriving advantage from it.
CANT TELL
HIM
MuCH
G ood
LIGHT
WITH A
IEColeman
By O. JACOBSSON
ADAMSON’S ADVENTURES The Treat
LANTERN
ITHIS Ie the little Coleman
1 Lantern with the big
Just the light you need for every outdoor use . . .
on the farm, for hunting, fishing, oatdoor aporta.
Has genuine Pyrex buige-type globe, porcelain ven-
tilator top, nickle-plated fount, built-in pump. Like
Coleman Lamps, it makes and burns its own gas
SEE YOUR LOCAL DEALER — or write
for FREE Folder.
COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE CO.
Dept. WU150, Wichita, Ka nej Los Angeles, Calif i
Chicago, III.: Philadelphia, Pa.
(5160)
THE
Stands Alone
That man who said thrift was a
mistake made no converts.
THE
Failure
The Curse of Progress
jw
Towards the end of last semester
an English professor decided to
spring a character quiz on his
Chaucer class. Among the ques­
tions was one asking, “Who
laughed and sang all day?”
After much squirming and strug­
gling one student wrote, “The sec­
ond little pig,” and handed in his
paper.
It came back a week later
marked as follows:
“Triple credit will be taken off
because the answer is wrong, your
attitude is too flippant, and be­
sides, it was the first little pigi”
By GLUYAS WILLIAMS
EXCUSES
OF
‘ EXPERTS
CALS ov 6LEEFJL
WE CPNT TAKE ONE,
RESENTFULR PLODS w
SÚIR5, UNDER ORDERS
MERE ABE SWEATERS
AND 1IN65 LAD OUT IN
GLOOMILY WATCHES
« MOMENT LATER
«US
...............
- —
MOYER. REMOVE tvUKT- EVEN 50 HE
TPKE
ER5, oimhmi 108
FOR AC10N
winner, experts take no
chances.
They choose
CLABBER GIRLI I
ONLY
/
lot
Very “Touching”
Two members of a club began
to exchange confidences. “Do you
know,” said the young man, “my
wife is absent on a pleasure cruise,
and that she writes me from every
port she touches?”
"You’re lucky,” replied the old­
er man. “My wife is also on a
pleasure cruise, but she touches
me from every port she calls at.”
HOICE
a OLD I wilL BE
PLENI HOT BY THE
1IM£ Mt HAS UN-
DRESSED
________
COMEs ou io MEAD of
tutuin m fonai t>
SIGHING DEEPLY, PiODs
SAR5 CALIN HE'D FOR- PUT IN THE STOPPER, AND
IN To BATHRoon
60T1EN IK BUSTER ON HiS
HE SUPF0515 n WLL
HEEL « QJeHT NT f TAKE
KEEP MM OP 100 Ulti 10
A OATH Whi THAT, O06HT HE » DRAW ANOTHER 1B MM,
PARENS SAY” NONSENSE ! '
WONT I ? Copyright, by The Ben Syndleate, Ine
CLABBER
GIRL
Baking Powder