LI'L ABNER | J-TRY THE. WEIGHING MACHINES! you, CHIEFS" ME, YOU STUPID DICK II THERE'S SOMETHING INHUMAN GOING ON YOUR CARD SAYS "GET YOUR BAS FLAT FEET OFF | HERE, CHIEFY DONALD DUCK THERE'S A LITTLE GIRL AT THE DOOR SAYS ONE OF YOL! DIPPED HER... NT YOU'RE RIGHT, DAGWOOD ~ THREE YEARS 16 A LONG TIME WITHOUT A RAISE K [= C 2 # fon] TT ieee, see i YT YOU CAN GET ANY ETCHUP OUT OF THIS BOTTLE JULIET JONES MUGGS AND SKEETER { SRIPPING WET! A= y | ll Lm | J ; ul ung ge fl THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturdey, August 6, 1960 15 "GREENWOOD PERSONALS GREENWOOD -- Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Turner, Marilyn and Carol of Orillia spent the weekend with Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Glynn Eastwood and Linda, Mrs. Charles Me- Taggart and sons Bob and Brian, and nephews, Gerald Pegg and Larry Wilson spent a few days last week at Balsam Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Clarke were on holiday last week and visited relatives at Napanee and other points east. THIS BOTTLE! In GEEOPENTTY | FLOATING IN THE SURF...} QUICK! IT f «ITS GOT A NOTE MIGHT BE A ces! Gest + LOOK WHAT 1 FOUND! +o GRANDMA AND T ARE READY TO GO HOME... MEET US AT THE CAR" ...SIGNED, 'GRAMPS! IM AMSHT! M A FAILURE! 'M NOTHING TO OOPS! . i TT vou wave Tq] THAT'S WHAT I LIKE ABOUT THAT TURTLEWHE'S SO UNASSUMING! { NOW I GUESS ( I'LL HAVE TO WAIT ANOTHER A THREE YEARS THE LONE RANGER SECRET AGENT X 9 Rev. T. H. Fleetham was al Guelph last week taking a special course on rural life work. The Jeff Copely family moved to Toronto on Thursday. The best wishes of the community goes with them to their new home. The George Blake family were at their cottage at Orillia over the weekend. Remember Sunday School on Sunday, 10.15 a.m. and the regu- lar church service at 11.30 am Rev T H Fleetham is home from his holidays during the month of July. --/ BIG JIM GRAB HOLD CF GOVERNMENT WITNESS, BUT HIM BREAK FREE AND IM GLAD yOu WERE KEEPING AN EYE ON SAM BATES, SAM PATES PLENTY SCARED! TONTO REPORTS TO THE LONE RANGER AFTER HIS RETURN FROM THE NEARBY TOWN, ,. «THEN, ITS A SIMPLE TRICK TO SLIP INTO PORT QUEENSVILLE AND ONTO A FREIGHTER FOR POINTS OVERSEAS / THERES A SETTLEUENT ABOUT TWENTY MLES ACE AND SCORPIO WILL PICK UP A GUIDE AND A CHANGE OF CLOTHES THERE «+ HE KNOWS HE'S IN FOR THING TO STAY OUT OF JAIL. BIG JIM WILL DO ANY- 'More Aid r Required U.S. View WASHINGTON (AP)--Canada, the United States and other in {dustrial countries have poured 1$18,000,000,000 worth of economic {aid into underdeveloped nations during the last six years. Canada contributed $215,000,000, the U.S, more than $12,000,000,000. But the U.S. state department says that a greater effort is needed to fill the growing re- quirements, particularly of coun- tries in Asia and Africa, and fo meet the expanding economic |challenge of the Soviet Commu- nist bloc. In a report to the Senate for- eign relations and House of Representatives foreign affairs committees, the department summarized aid totals since 1954 from 15 industrialized nations of the free world. The report con- cluded '"'efforts so far have not been adequate to fill the require- ment." U.S. GAVE TWO-THIRDS The U.S. has supplied two- thirds of the economic assistance covered in the report for a total of $12,025,000,000. Fourteen other countries, including Canada, Brit- Choose A Goodwill Used Car FOR DRIVING COMFORT AND DEPENDABILITY FROM THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. ain, France, Australia, Japan land West Germany provided loans, grants and other assist» ance totalling $5,904,000,000. The state department also released a pamphlet on the Com- munist economic offensive . say- ing that by last April the Soviet Union and other Communist na- tions had given $3,800,000,000 in | credits and grants for economic and military assistance to 20 less-developed countries. BUZ SAWYER JANE ARDEN NO, TDION'T COME YO SEE YOU OFF!- BY A STRANGE COINCIDENCE, T'M JAR THE SAMI 5 MICKEY MOUSE ROY ROGERS A a © 1990, King Features Syndicate, Tne, World rights reserved BU FuLL SPEED ASTERN! Lh : +: = x WELL, IT TOOK A LITTLE SLEUTHING TO OUT WHICH FLIGHT VOU WERE ---- ON:+- BUT I MADE ww! MAYBE THAT FIRE WILL CATCH YET, JANE! JUST FINISHED! 4 COME TAK SG AC | POOL CO." 16 EXPENSIVE! HEIR LITTLE 7 EXTRAS ARE {7 EAM...BUT ") Dred ov 1 EE { READY TO PULL OUT! BREEZY, GO GET COME ON, BEEF THE SHACK! IF I WASN'T HOG-TIED LIKE THIS, I'D BREAK EVERY BONE IN I'M SORRY ABOUT IT WAS THIS OR LEAVIN' YOU HERE | HAVING WES SHOOT WITH THE BEAR, | ME! I'LL TAKE WY BERTHA! HE CAN CHANCES WITH BE MIGHTY NASTY! [ BUSTER! J come on, BREEZY, You R- remeneEr 1 ---- ME, DON'T YOU, BUSTER? TM YOUR | (SEAM | BRICK BRADFORD GRANDMA "LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY "Since the modest beginnings HURRY, KIDS / GRANDMA, IS SPRINKLIN' HER YARD / in 1954," the pamphlet said, "credits and grants extended by the Soviet bloc to free world less - developed countries have increased almost steadily year by year until they attained a rate of about one billion dollars per year during 1958 and 1959." Russians Fear Tourist 'Spies' LONDON (Reuters) -- The So- viet trade union newspaper Trud said Friday that "'revolutionary 1 WONDER WHAT OID MAKE OUR RATIONS ®LY AWAY! OKAY, SHADY, APOLOGIZE! T L THIS PLACE GBTTING ON MY NERVES! GUESS MORE THAN THE DINOSAURS | Wi MAY P Be uP ASANST A FORCE WB CANN vigilance" by all Russians will expose capitalist spies disguised as tourists. A long article, quoted by the Soviet news agency Tass, said Russians will '"'unmask the at- tempts of the imperialist intelli. gence to use the personal con- tacts, widened in recent years, of citizens of countries of the social- ist camp with the capitalist world, for the purpose of sending over its spies." The newspaper ..'d Russians will continue their hospitality to fl | sincere visitors but: "As to the |attempts of the intelligence serv- {ices to use this good cause for ---- | their sinister designs, Soviet HEN BACK INTO HIS SICK SLEEP AGAIN! ---- 8-6 D Features Syndicate In 3 -e tributed by Kin Features Syndicate, | people again and again will | counter this with the tested weap- {ons of decades -- revolutionary | vigilance." Burmese Frontier Dispute Settled HONG KONG (Reuters)-- | China - Burma border problems | have been settled on the principle | of natural features and watershed |lines, a Burmese delegation | spokesman said here Friday. | The spokesman, Col. Bathan, | told reporters on arrival here ~'from China that "it was not a matter of either party making concessions," although there were many difficulties in the negotiations. He added: "We managed to work with co-operation and in cordial atmosphere . . . the set- tlement of the long-standing dis- pute between Burma and China is a brilliant example of peaceful coexistence." SALLY'S SALLIES 7 "Lhe cat?--Asleep behind the stove, Why do you ask?" I "Cheer up, darling. The car's