Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Tucson Daily Citizen from Tucson, Arizona • Page 24

Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

YOU ACTED A Lime fvtvr. i GUESS ACBIML II CAM AHD KACH A BIKINI, PUT Crt WK Iveti M' QUIZIM KATHEX UNUSUAL FOR HXMTLY, AVM, 'tterew fAJHOM iff A iaf 'Of SCIENTIFIC BOOKS gEACH LIKE FATHER 6U6ESJtP, MOST WtMAL BRENDA STARK SOME PEOPLE )( KUC I IVb CRITICISM HEY M1STERX VOU MISSED EMMY LOU BLONDIE THE GIRLS CITIZEN COMICS JULY 3, 1959 PAGE 24 AT 3 O'CLOCK ALL WATER WILL BE SHUT OFF FOR 24 HOURS tD BETTER STORE SOME FOR AN EMERENCV-- "Forming looked like so much jun from the car window." NANCY I JUST PILLED THE BATHTUB NANCY -2CSSL AND YOU STAY OUT OF IT you WEEE la, WERE HALLUCWATINS THOSE VDfCeS YOU VVK6 HEARING CAME PROM WflWN YOU WERE NOT THE VOICES OF OTHERS TALKING ABOUT TO YOU FOR HELFU.AND YOU AERANGfP TO HAVE THE JT WAS THE ONLY WAY 1OU GOULP BE HELPED, VOJ REFUSED TO BE MOSPfTAUZED WHY CO VOU VWWTTDWLLMe, MASTER50N? YOU'RE NOT THAT NAIVE, COURT SEND ME I HEARD THOSE VOICES ftS CLEARLY AS I HEAR YOURS TO THE STATE REX MORGAN BEEN STAMPING UP THREE HOURS. 6BTTIN THE MfM SIR. WHAT THAT TOPO WITH IT? HEV, YOUVB eor YOUR APRON ON BACKWARP TO SIT ANP EAt THROO6H OOXINA BEETLE DAILY SO? CANT' I KISS MY COUSIN? THINK I LOVE SUNDAY! O-O'CH, YOU MUSTN'T! WE'RE COUSINS! YOU DONTBEUEVE MYMOTHERfMNOFF WITH A SAILOR? WHY NOT? NO DECENT WOMAN COULD DESERT HER SON LIKE THAT! WfeS GOOD AND ND.M KNOW SHE MUST HAVE BEEN! ORPHAN ANNIE -I RNO THOSE AFFAIRS YOU 3OWG TO UADY PARTY MRS. MUCH-POtJSH? INVITATION THE POTTS -THE WINCES jcufzfwusr ANP WILL.

TUY MOST TMMLKTB VVoPW OJZ BB OBPEBEP, OUT OF THE TBS UXAUPOUCC ALSO MONriDZfNe TWW4SMISS10N-- HCVV ARE W5 TO PUZZLE ny WHAT HE WECWTMNSLATfi TV f. V. S. CM All by U--IH F.lui 7-3- "It'i certainly been a relief to away from the boys for two hours, twenty-eight minutes, plus six seconds!" MRS. MAYFIELD Give Her Her Discharge--Pronto! DEAR MRS.

MAYFIELD: My husband and I were previously happy until our 17-year-old daughter-in-law moved in with us when my son went into the service. From the very beginning I disliked the girl; I knew she was too immature for marriage. Unfortunately, my son and her parents did not think so. Unfortunately, also, her parents are not particularly well- educated people, nor do they have the means to help, a young mar- mied couple. Soooooo, it fell to us to step into the breach, and there was really nothing we could do when my son was shipped overseas but ask her to live with us.

From that time on she has done nothing but make trouble. She is constantly playing down our son (her husband) and playing up my husband. He is beginning to think she is a little goddess, simply because she flatters him about everything he says or does. She is beginning to get across to him that I'm an old fogey, a poor housekeeper, a godawful cook, an overly possessive mother, a nagging wife, etc. Whereas she is the worst little liar, lazy physically and mentally, strictly material and grasping as all get out.

Where do we go from here, Molly? DANDER UP DEAR DANDER UP: I don't know where you go, but I know where she should-namely, anywhere but under your roof. I've heard of little troublemakers like she is before, and I wouldn't underestimate her potential, either. Couldn't she join her husband overseas? Couldn't you pack her off to her own parents if you paid for the privilege? Couldn't you see that she had room and board elsewhere? I'm quite sure there must be some way you could tactfully rid yourself of the smart-aleck young lady--and if not tactfully, then tactlessly! MOLLY MAYFIELD tf GOOD EVENING to Ernest Hussmann--MoUy. Perhaps Buy A Leash! DEAR MRS. MAYFIELD: You didn't answer my last plea for help, but please find it in your heart to do so now.

Here's my problem (my life!) in a nutshell. I am 25 years old, fairly attractive, the mother of four, ages 4y 2 3, 2, and 6 months, and married to a man who thinks he is still free and single. We live near my husband's brother and wife, childless and free. I am sick and tired of being left at home with the children while hubby roams day and night with brother and wife. The root of the trouble, of course, is lack of good baby sitters, and money to pay them if there were any.

I've tried protesting loudly--no good. I've tried leaving hubby for hours with the kids, but what does he do? Puts them to bed and goes about his business. I've tried buying a new dress, shoes, or something everytime I was left alone. The answer--no more money forthcoming. So what do I do now? I'm heartsick.

AT HOME DEAR STAY AT HOME: That's true about the baby-sitting problem, but there are times when you're simply going to have to budget for it, anyway. If your husband is selfish enough to go gallivanting without you, then you're going to have to be smart enough to work out some means of going along. You might even start asking brother and sister-in-law in for an evening at home--just to keep hubby there. Goodness knows, I'm not trying to pretend your problem is an easy one, but somehow you have to get the point across to hubby that you're not trying to pass a course in "I stay home while you go out." MOLLY MAYFIELD When Hubby Gets H)ut Of Bounds' DEAR MRS. MAYFJELD: After many years of marriage, happy ones, I thought, a struggle for the little security we have, our family grown and married.

I find my husband has had a mistress (much younger than I) for some time. The shock and heartbreak are natural to someone unsuspecting and still in love. But the thing that stumps me is his cry, "You have never understood me." That's a laugh, considering that this all-understanding soul he's latched onto has had two or three husbands. Where was her understanding? And how much understanding after she hooks my stupid, but trusting, husband? Why, Molly, are these "understanding" women divorced? And why after so many, many years, are wives so-MISUNDERSTANDING? DEAR I certainly don't advise some of you "misunderstanding" wives to give a husband of many, many years his freedom on his sudden impulse. Long years of marriage should, of course, reap their own reward and at least not be given up too easily.

TELL ME WHY How Do Bees Make Honey? Win Scad your question, name, addrew and age to TELL ME WHY! ol this paper. The Junior, 15-vohutM encyclopedia for school and home, will awarded for letter selected. In MM of duplicate questions, the author of "Tell Why!" will select the winner. Today's winner Is: LINDA LONGNECKER, 8, Oxford, Pa. The reason bees make honey is that it serves them as food.

So the whole process of making honey is a way of storing up food for the bee colony. The first thing a bee does is visit flowers and drink the nectar. Then it carries the nectar home in its honey sac. This is a baglike enlargement of the digestive tract just in front of the bee's stomach. There is a valve that separates this section from the stomach.

The first step in the making of the honey takes place while th6 nectar is in the bee's honey sac. The sugars found in the nectar undergo a chemical change. The next step is to remove a large part of the water from the nectar. This is done by evaporation which takes place because of the heat of the hive and by ventilation. Honey stored in the honeycombs by honeybees has so much water removed from the original nectar that it will keep almost forever! The honey is put into the honeycombs to ripen and to serve as the future food supply.

By the way, when bees cannot obtain nectar, they sometimes collect sweet liquids excreted by various bugs or secretions from plants other than nectar. Honey is removed from the hive by various methods. It may be squeezed from the comb by presses or it may be sold in the combs cut from the hive. Most honey, however, Is removed from the combs by a machine known as a honey extractor. This uses centrifugal force to make the honey leave the comb.

Honeys vary greatly, depending on the flowers from which the nectar came and the environment where the hive is situated. Honey contains an amazing number of substances. The chief ngredients are two sugars known as laevulose and dextrose. It also contains the following: small amounts of sucrose (cane sugar), maltose, dextrins, minerals, numerous enzymes, numerous vitamins in small amounts and tiny amounts of proteins and acids. Honeys differ in flavor and color, depending on the source of the nectar.

In those areas where ioney is produced, there are usually only a few plants that produce enough nectar to be a source of supply. Thus, in the northeast United States most honey comes from clover, in the West it may come rom alfalfa, in Europe from leather and so on. ifr FUN TIME The Riddle Box 1. What kind of ears do engine's lave? 2. What animal do you look like when you go in swimming? 3.

Where does the captain of a keep his hens? Answers CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Fimoui in ojwra. Low voice. 10 Urith. Imitation: Abbr. 15 Spurn.

16 Port of 17 VU-t-vli: 3 19 Double. 20 Jine singer. 21 "withering, it remark. 23 Denoting entrance. 25 Pltnl of the lily family.

26 Pins tor burning coals. 30 English Earl and family. 33 Boundaries. 34 Vice President, 1925-29. 36 Cereal grain.

37 American engineer. 38 Crowbar. 39 A little: Ital 40 Farm enclosure. 41 Peninsular country. 42 Bridle 43 Make a 45 Checkers, in Britain.

47 Strayed. 49 Cliino. 50 S3 Bii or Little, in the iky. 57 Footnote abbreviation. 58 and Tyler too." 60 Warbled.

61 Ancient city of Babylonia. 62 Used up. 65 joint. 64 Aptly named author. 65 Siberian cily, of Tomsk.

DOWN 1 Strike: Slant 2 Persian name. 3 Puerto 4 Gives a detailed report. 5 Author of "Shirley." 6 Army under Penning. 7 Baden-Baden and others. 8 Dry, as Italian wine.

9 Handsome but poisonous shrub. 10 Egyptian goddess of love. 11 First great American tragedian. 12 Name for Ireland. 13 Brief pain.

18 Ancient city in Egypt. 22 24 Part of B.P.O.E. 26 Guard from eviL 27 Lariat. 28 Western ictor on TV. 29 Retcued.

31 for example. 32 Opposed to lee, in geology. 35 Dons. 38 Symbol of Texast 2 words. 39 Port American Samoa.

41 Senator from Oklahoma. 42 B. C. of Rome. 44 Device for gathering shellfish, 46 camp: 2 words.

48 Use oa aircraft. 50 Dangerous chance. 51 Statesman of Israel. 52 "Be kind to animals" group. 54 Penh, chief city of Cambodia.

55 untold. 50 Give off smoke. 59 Tablet BUT ONLY A LITTLE 1. Engineers. 2.

A In the hatchway. little bear. I'm afraid that's all I can say. you could--and should continue to. At least you've done what MOLLY MAYFIELD STEVE CANYON Commissioners lonor Fred Faver PORTLAND, 'aver, chairman of the Arizona iame and Fish Commission, has seen given a lifetime honorary membership in the Western Association of Game and Fish The retired Buckeye farmer was honored at the closing banquet session of the organization's annual conference here.

Faver it the third person to be so honored in the association's history. Ball Point Pens Do Big Sales Job CHICAGO --UPI-- About 2,000 different types of business firms in the' U. S. promote their services or products by distributing ball point pens with messages imprinted on them. These companies range from funeral homes to dental laboratories, according to one manufacturer of the pens, which also reported printing a message in Arabic for a Saudi Arabian customer.

What the message said, manufacturer doesn't know. the Where Are You? You are in the ancient capita! of a European country. You are looking at the ruins of a building that once could seat about 50,000 spectators. Many people died here a long time ago. Where are you? See tomorrow's paper for the answer.

Rent Freeze Stalls Argentine Inflation By FAMES R. WHELAN BUENOS a steal," the man said as he showed off his apartment, and you had to agree. It took up three floors. There were balconies on all sides and spacious terraces, one jutting out from what could easily be described as a cocktail lounge. Thirteen stories below was the palm-dotted Plaza San Martin, one of the choicest pieces of real estate in Buenos Aires.

Out the window you could see the silvery Rio de la Plate. "And do you know what it costs me?" the man asked. "Fourteen hundred pesos a month." Fourteen hundred pesos is roughly equivalent to 15 U.S. dollars. Not far away, a few steps off the Calle Florida, the city's famed shopping center, there's a fairly prosperous family living in an apartment 'only a little bit more modest for what amounts to $4.50 a month.

Both tenants are beneficiaries of Argentina's rent control law. On the books since 1943, it has since been extended times. Commissions have studied it; debates have raged about it. In the end, a comma has been inserted here, a phrase there, another one deleted, but today it's just about the same law that was passed in 1943. Send your tricks, riddles, or puzzles to TELL ME WHY! Give your name, age and address.

A Britannica World Atlas or illustrated Year Book of important events in every field will be awarded for the letters selected each week. Distance Can't Stump Antique Collector SAN ANTONIO, tique collector Hal Clayburne won't be stumped by distance. He moved his 203-year-old log cabin here from Virginia. The cabin, still sound after a cross-country trip by rail, serves as a rustic home for Ciayburne and his family. Clayburne learned about the old homestead during visits with friends in the Shenandoah Valley.

Later, hearing it was about to be razed, he a hurried trip East. The San Antonio contractor found the dwelling in a sad state of Its owner was happy to take $65 for it. White, Negro Both To Die BEAUFORT, S. C. A white Marine from Atlanta, convicted of raping a 47-year-old Negro, and a young Negro, convicted of the attempted rape of a white housewife, are under sentences to die in the electric chair Aug.

14. Both received death sentences yesterday in the same court by Judge J. Henry Johnson, who has said he agreed with both jury verdicts. If Marine Pvt. Fred G.

Davis, 24, is electrocuted he will be the first white man in recorded court history to die in this country for raping a Negro. The Negro sentenced is Israel Sharpe. Davis was tried by an all-male, white jury. There were six white men and six Negro men on the jury which tried Sharpe, 19. It is against South Carolina law to publish the name of rape victims.

Rape is a capital crime in South Carolina. Both juries found the men guilty without a recommendation of mercy, making the death sentence mandatory. "This should establish beyond all doubt that any person, regardless of race, color or creed, can get justice in South Carolina," said the 70-year-old There was no indication of appeals in either case. No South Carolina Supreme Court ever has refused to review a death sentence. Johnson ordered Sharpe committed to the state hospital for i 30-day observation.

Countless thousands throughout the nation benefit from it, paying rents of $5, $10 or $20 a month. But they're the ones who are still living in the same houses or apartments they occupied 16 years ago. If you were looking for a home now, you'd find those same places quoted at anywhere from $150 to $600 a month. The sky's virtually the i i for a landlord whose rents are unfrozen when a tenant moves out. Technically, the law gives the landlord the right to evict the tenant if he is occupying landlord's own property and he needs it for his own family.

But eviction means lengthy court battles. Sometimes it means street brawls. Take the case of a landlord whose son was crippled by polio. He asked his tenant, a doctor, to move out because he needed more room for his own family. The doctor agreed, providing the landlord paid 56,000 pesos.

Eventually, he did vacate all but his office in a tiny part of the building in which he'd been paying a rent of $13 a month. That he wouldn't give up. Finally, after eight years of scrapping with the doctor, the exasperated a slugged some movers trying to haul furniture into his tenant's office. The rent law is blamed for nation's housing shortage because few want to build for renting. Owners of new property can set any rent they want at the beginning, but there it's frozen.

a risky business in a country where inflation has rocketed the cost of living 115 per cent in the past year alone. Time is running out for the rent law and Congress is studying it once again. But with rent control just about the only brake on runaway living costs, there is reluctance to tinker with it. In addition, there is little agreement on what changes should be made if any are. Prospects, therefore, sion.

are for still another exten- YESTERDAY'S ANSWER 7- 3-.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Tucson Daily Citizen
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Tucson Daily Citizen Archive

Pages Available:
391,799
Years Available:
1941-1977