DONALD DUCK a: © 107 Wake Disney Prodntionm -- World Rights Roverved AY THINK ILL GET SOMETHING » A LITTLE CiFFERENT IN BLONDIE PARDON ME, SIR---00 YoU #4 HAVE HERRINGBONES? jf THERE'S A YOUNG MAN TO SEE You, MISS BROWN, I THINK HE'S AMERICAN, BUZ SAWYER MOTHER! DON'T SON?.,,SON2,.. YOU REMEMBER | HEAVEN HELP MEL MEL TM PEPPER / HE TOO THINKS os YOUR SON, IM CHRISTY SAWYER, © King Features Syndicate, inc., 1967. World rights renerved JANE ARDEN AFTER I BUY CHAMACO SOME. NEW CLOTHE S....HE CAN JUST GET OUT AND TAKE HIS CHANC THROUGH WITH HIM! 'THIS 16 THE PLACE! I WROTE BILLY ONE SHOT TO MEET ME HERE, I'M LI'L ABNER NUBBIN WHUT AILS TINY IS, HE'S IN LOVE!! CHUCKLE ITS PLAIN AS TH' NOSE ON YORE FACE Jr -e@ ACADIAN = & @ BEAUMONT @ BUICK @ PONTIAC HAVE YOUR CHICKIES LEARNED TO WALK IN A ROW YET, Boones? DE In A ROW, CERTAINLY / THEY RE VERY I PAPPY 2 ( PSST7-/N MAH CASE, SON, TWARN'T > ALL LOVES' SOME OF /T WERE GOOD OLE-FASHIONED TERROR // CHILDREN! © King Featercs Seven, Yat. 1967. World rights tooerved. SECRET AGENT X9 MONSTRATOR PRICED FROM $2,435 CROSSWORD HENRY | CHEAP! T ShOP 8-7 Can Kiicen on -- JULIET JONES WHO IS IT? I SAID... WHO'S THERE? LOOK, WHOEVER YOU ARE-- iF YOU DON'T GO AWAY I'M CALLING THE POLICE! I KNOW YOu'RE OUT THERE, NOW TELL ME WHAT YOU WANT OR I WILL >, CALL THE POLICE! WELLOP? MICKEY MOUSE WITH MY SLIPPER HERE COMES PLUTO X\\ y \\\ AWN & ks 1 THAT WAY HE | GETS TWO | TREATS! Ser ; COLORED ALMOST EVERY PAGE OF THE COLORING BOOK \_" WE GOT HIM ; ws HE: WASN'T INTERESTED IN \; IT TILL WE TOOK |} } qt ITAPART... / MUGGS AND SKEETER you cor 4] SOMETHING BETTER To bo? 1 sormy, BUT I CANT GO SURFING wit vou, purty! A ! - Southside waits for his cue to start shooting... GO AHEAD AND SQUIRM, / CORRIGAN...IT MAKES UP FOR THE yi LUMPS YOUGAVE {6 ME ON THE a RIVIERA, © King Feotures Syndicate, YOU CAN EVEN BEG ME NOT TO SHOOT. I'LL LISTEN, ,, UNTIL THE WHISTLE ACROSS DOWN 21. Duck 1. Iridescent 1, Choice genus gem 2. Whitish 22. Forbid 8. Worry 3. Macaws 23, Af- 9. Extra 4, Man's firmas 10, Send, as nickname tive money 5. Liberates vote 12, Book 6.Anarchiste 25, For [NiOT of maps 7. Send forth shame fa 18.Roman & Masonic 26. Pole Bana official door- 27. Bank ° 14, Falsehoods keepers em- Saturday's Answer 15, Annoy 9. Hostile ployee 32, Core 16. Verso: broadside 28. Splicing 35. Solitary abbr. 11, Names tool 36. Manacle 17. Godd 15, Seed 29, Pushed 37. Astringent of dawn vessel 30. Rise and fruit 18, Paper 17. Blunder fall of 38. Employ measure; 20. Method Oceans 40. Alas! abbr, 19. Ahead arr aT | it 22, Game ye he "4 fish Gy, 24, Breeze 7 25, Girl's ' GY ha -- 1¢ 1S 4 26, Under- YW) woos a 77,777 y, rr) river Y UY , WG, 28, Best i 20 Jet W722. [23 31, Pronoun GY 32, Hasten OT7V 33, Greeting . Gia WG, 24. Comnate Ce AS ae 37, Furnished WY ad with "4 ¥ --| mors =o | "A Y oe, Cons aT TPs foe Sr [301 of flowers bes 1) 40. Living oy 41. Trend i Gia 42, Apple % centers ial Y Le 48, Lease ae 'Cs Y 44.Pay Y Yi attention va As oo] Creative Period Revealed In Lost City Of Samarkand By JOHN BEST MOSCOW (CP) -- Excava- tions have shed new light on one of the creative periods in the long history of Samar- kand, a city founded at least 2,500 years ago in what today is the Soviet central Asian re- public of Uzbekistan. The diggings have been cen- tred in the Afrasiab hills, where the original Samarkand was located, just north of the present city of 250.000, Finds relate to the seventh century AD. During the 1954-64 period a large block of dwellings was unearthed. They contained many examples of the antece- dents of contemporary Samar- kand pottery, widely known in the Middle East. In the spring of 1965 a sec- tion of a large residence, ap- parently the home of a rich feudal dignitary, was found. The colors on its wall paint- ings were still bright and fresh. On the wall of a hall is de- picted a caravan led by a richiy-adorned white elephant. Study of fragments indicates that the elephant probably carried a litter with a queen or princess in it. Three women on horseback ride behind the elephant. In- scribed on the arm of one, still clearly decipherable by experts, are the words, "'at- tendant to a princess." It's in Sogdian, the language of the people who occupied Sar.ar- kand at that time. A painting on another wall shows an envoy sent to the king of Samarkand bearing gifts. Again an_ inscription, this one on the envoy's gar- ment, provided the vital clue. "A study of the paintings suggests that the archeologists have found the ruins of a luxurious palace of the Ihshids, rulers of seventh century Samarkand," writes Y. Guliamov, member of the Uzbekistan academy of sci- ences, describing the findings in the magazine Niva. Guliamov believes the pal- ace was deserted for some time due to invasions of the Arabs, who struggled for 150 years to conquer Sogdiana. "It is at least probable that it was the Arabs, to whom pictures of human beings were taboo, who gouged the eyes of the figures and spoiled the paintings by slashing the pictures of men and animals. "However, even the re- mains of the paintings are sufficient to convince us that we have come upon examples of a highly developed art." Samarkand is best known to history as the home of the warrior - conqueror Tamer- lane, who made it the seat of a vast empire in the 14th and 15th centuries. But it was only one era in the colorful life of Samar- kand, which lies athwart some of the principal caravan routes between the Orient and the West and was a favorite target for invaders and ma- rauders in early times. It was often subdued but always rose again. FIRE EARLY, NO ONE WHO HEARD THE SHOT COULD ANO THAT WILL BE SOON. TO THE NEXT Balance Of New Car Warranty e@ G.M.A.C, Financing @ Immediate Delivery HUBERT FOR GOOD OH,NO! Not ANOTHER OLD BILL- a OFFICE COLLECTION! HES GETTING HERE GOES MY LUNCH MARRIED 7 LOOK, TELL HIM TO GO yy || AHEAD WITH THE i, 2\ WEDDING AND ILLOWE TPs 3 HIM A QUARTER! id Hi aa Fi { iS é : f es Ht) YOUR HEALTH Nausea Blamed On Reducing Pills By JOSEPH G. MOLNER, MD Dear Dr. Molner: My doctor] { can give it to you. That was told ne I should not take reduc-|one of the famous--or let's say ing pills and should watch my! infamous--medical frauds. The diet, but I, continued to gain.!man posed as a physician, ac- Then he prescribed pills to con-/tually had a criminal record, trol fiuid retention and I lost}He hornswoggled a_ scientific several pounds but became journal into printing an account nauseated, : of his "discovery," and the Two days ago my sister sug-newspapers picked up the gested I try some of her reduc- story assuming it to be gen- ing pills. They are orange and yine heart-shaped. After one day I' The truth promptly emerged, had the same effects as with but that's the way with these fluid retention pills. things. Many people saw the contain and are the side effects denial. The fish-eye harmful? I would like to take business is totally worthless, them for a while because they! have done wonders for my sis-) Dear Dr. Molner: Our next ter. Would it be dangerous?--/door neighbor Mrs. W.H. |daughter, 3 our two children, 1 refuse to guess what the aged 4 and 6, and a neighbor pills are. I might guess wrong.|/boy who is 7 disrobing and If you accept my advice you!"playing doctor" in our garage will either (a) have nothing to the other day. do with these pills, or (b) take) She was quite upset and left one to your doctor. There may no doubt that she considered be a brand name or symbol by our children very evil, nasty- which he can identify them. | minded and a bad influence on The only way he can guide her daughter. you intelligently is to know We refused to get as upset as what you are taking, and how she was, and I commented that nuch. Pa ade didn't condone what a they did, I knew that children MAY BE HARMFUL _ had a natural curiosity about Will your sister's pills be)ai parts of their bodies, and harmful? I don't know. One that J considered this behavior woman's pill can be anothe*'s!tg be normal. I also suggested poison. The fact that your sister)ihat we ought to be more aware uses them with success duesn't/4¢ where the children were and mean you can use them safely.' what they were doing at play Swapping pills blindly is a * dangerous habit and a lot of/ TAUGHT FACTS people get in serious trouble! We have tried to teach our that way. children the facts of life as their questions have come up. Dear Dr. Molner: I read in a| For future reference, could newspaper several years ago|you tell me how you would have about some doctor giving injec-|handled the above situation?-- tions of protein material from! Mrs. L.C.P. the Jenses of fish eyes to clear, I think you handled it admi- up cataracts in the eyes of rably. When youngsters from 3 older people. Can you tell me to 7 'play doctor,"' they aren't where to get more information | being, nasty-minded; just cu- on this?--W.T.B. rious. Tell your older boy that' Can you tell me what the pills false story but did not see the protein "caught" her 16 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, August 8, 1967 BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER (Top Record-Holder in Masters' Individual Championship Play) FAMOUS HANDS South dealer. North-South Vulnerable. NORTH 4107653 %7--- 99842 8652 WEST ene A984 @KQI8752 109648 @KQ76 @31053 94 +-- SOUTH @KQI2 WA @A &AEKQI1073 The bidding: South West North East 4NT 5@ Pass 69 6 Pass Pass Dble, Opening lead -- King of dia- monds, I have it on excellent authority -- M. Harrison - Gray, famous British expert, is my source -- that the deal shown acutally occurred in a pair championship many years ago. There is no use saying that hands such as the one |held by South are never dealt |because the players who partic- ipated in the tournament would testify to the contrary. South opened with four no- trump. He was planning to bid a grand slam if his partner show- ed one ace in response to the Blackwood call. But South was playing against highly active opponents. By the |time is was his turn to bid again, | East-West were in six hearts. Reluctant to double and settle for a small penalty, and realiz- ing that he could not make seven clubs because the opponents were sure to have the spade ace, South now bid an imaginative six spades. It seemed to him that on the bidding North would have some spade length. When East doubled, South stood firmly behind his decision |and passed. | West led the king of diamonds and South was now home. He won with the ace and led the K-Q-J of trumps, East holding up the ace until the third round. East returned a diamond and declarer ruffed it with his last trump. South then led the ace of hearts, ruffed it in dummy, drew East's last trump, and ran his clubs to bring home the extaord- inary slam. It is true that West could have beaten the slam had he led a club instead of a diamond, but this should not detract from the credit due South for his bold bid. South might have been carted off in an ambulance if it had turned out that North was short of spades, but he took the posi- sion that six hearts doubled was bound to produce a poor match- point result and that he there- fore had little to lose by his seemingly dangerous bid. Fulton Lauds Leader Race VANCOUVER (CP) -- Davie Fulton, Conservative party lead- ersk'p candidate, said Friday the fact that nine men have declared themselves candidates is a healthy sign. "The other eight are all good men and all good frtends of mine."' he told a press confer: ence 'That so many want ta *\lead the party shows there is considerable optimism about its future."' When asked who he thought his main opponent would be at the party's September leader- ship convention, he declined to name any one man because "I respect them all and don't want to ccncentrate only on one." _ Mr. Fulton, MP for Kanloops, issued the sixth of a planned series of eight policy state- ments, It involved calling a con- stitufional conference to deal with a national policy for cities. Urgent problems are going un- solved because the. prov- inces, which have constitutional power, have no resources and the federal government refuses to aci. QUEENIE this isn't considered good man- ners and let it go at that. Your neighbor is making too much of an incident that has happened countless times. Note to E.B.M.: A tendency to weakness of the veins, and hence varicose veins, can "run in the family." Pills won't pre- vent varicose veins; injections can be effective in coagulating them under some circun- stances. This does not apply to severe cases, as a rule, since these may require more exten- sive surgery. "MICKEY MOUSE HAVE To GET UP WHEt MUGGS AND SKEETER