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THIMBLE THEATER Starring Popeye By Segar WRMAJESTYX /OKAY. X I DEARWILO wiowoNeN)< £• ~r~ Trf J TH ' ’ >rr jS • (IS a W Vm »@t3B 1 xsr -«» fl i Wj Wr.3 z—\ W >' -dsM <1 XIM. s=l hffin , BLONDIE B y Ch,c Y°™g I I SHE KNOW [ TUg.BE /} U fl t / " ITT !• ” i ■s MORE O p r)J E Pg ~ r^7 S - < X—f BE WWw*7l? ITS SO ' X '—Tw \ J1° Q 2?'. MK ** jX • / RESPECTABLE, WMV ) "' ' Xlfe / WFL i L LCAVE LL ‘ ' \ AREN'T tu»B WIVES ) ft ■T EARLV IN MV CAR ) ITS AVERT \> INVITED? _Lx £# '7 ( AND GET BACK Z QUIET, - : K_. } V . x7—' I AROUND supper ) RESPECTABLE >» ,-\ LJ ’ 0 N___/ Z / . c^-^ s T r c ;> ■■:•.■ f fa n ? ■ ?■;'• -, a■ ? jft Lff t ' f -x yfi ft ; 'v~\ ' j/ 0x ; ■ - Fi isT» 0 1951 K'M Fwiup. »./-*•.♦. o - ■ -<» _ — DUMB DORA By 811 Dwyer WERE k . |?& MEMBER H! wee</M " HELEN &EE:PER UOW MANY OP designs \ \ f’A.// CHATTER ITEM, 1! W —V VA. YOU KEEDf HAVE \ BING ANO DORA zin-> » 'S-'Kie started goat knickers?/ \ in return A ' ,// SOCIETie? •? A1 / /\ \ WIM-MAIL- YOU /■ "\ 1 “SCHOOL HAVE GONE QUITE A FEW / / \ ) A REPORTER’S / I ™ N Z T / <_ 4 OP CUTTING UP FELT CQ / / / I AMV kIEUUt* I anp making / If / FORGET, ANY NEWS I vC THEM Y " outof DOR4?WOUUD ( SX. / SCHOOL. wi?L BE XiaJto \ y S Lgo KRAZY KAT By Herriman < M— iAUJmv a.„hi jail - W : hua/a/a - JSSSsS v £dt>c>A '~^^^* aae T jjMyj jw W < 7 / ' l>ti - _ -rZ. - >di-- / - dE 7 . V . ■ d . '. x >■»,! <e_tax3 j t_ n :.»., 411 ... .. . -.„ . - Il^l . , „. ———- - JUST KIDS By Ad Carter L^^^^LLV — LU HEY-MUSH? ■“■—^ytw^afteq^Stta^^MY | WOULDJA PLEASE Ar\ ~ I HIS OWN J upzJ lh. ] p ER aX tS. bSßlspT^o/ X jSny !!J9 ip InOZF <rT wm ■! -iflflmW MflF_ kFl.. ÜbmC. ■B»/ilv<.i ■■■■■ TIM TYLER’S LUCK By Lyman Young mn|mißßiuJuunuuui|jnu|||hjk up was sore. X|| /wV¥¥HI I X I X F^r s7 F 5 s—r5 — r ou.eb.ves'm a x vousuallsee BECAUSE TU AT oily ™ ',7*\ 11 X, \f 'P a ' / A ftUAT f \ -IM GOiH' OH ] f A»E AGAIN — SOOH , \ FILLER.GOT AWAY l|‘ \"M .X 1 I XL " ( YOUTkNOyJ ) GUARO DUTY J ( AFTER. TWAT \ FROOME-.' BUT p' V' 1 • r\ ’ k WWA-TtAAT / H? TONIGHT / < TIME'UNTIU Y &\ rijEi\/J»>.-'S.,¥£y --.TW X tk. \ wi z»««uj YOU SAVED Z COMESTWE S^^. D , ■'•' HIV'W j> \ U | W ZTfljfl jOS WoW Irate®- ilWw 11 If v\ SJL » ■ . n I LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY By Brandon Walsh ■Hjflg >y«W r " FCOUNTY FAIR?- IT SOUNDS W F HONEST TM AWFUL DUMB STANDIN* AROUNDWNOW YOU STAY THERE,ZERO,AN*DON'T W Xx SWELL —JUST LIKE A ■ LOOKIN'AT CIRCUS POSTERS-JUST LIKE 11 MOVE UNTIL! COME BACK i- YOU SEE, \A ’/ ' \ ' V CIRCUS OR. SOMETHIN'— fll WAS A RICH MILLIONAIRE - I ONLY GOT TWO PERFESSIOHAL DISH-WASHERS DONT/ 1 XX-, ~ ) —AN'THEY GOT , EYES -AN’ I GOTTA USE'EM LOOKING FOR / HAVE DOGS — NOT WHEN THEY'RE ■, FREE SHOWS- hrcEOW^nW^W - *CikXA JOR X< 1 JUST HUHTW'FOR ' U X ■ AN* THAT MEANS «W< 7 XjXjlß ' WTT7 > 'Ar K YOUKINSEE'EM (jOWN |fj •- 7® M X /r/ NOTH,W ’- c,r< t * MTS Jj -■ />ko3 JjLr ill ~', i~e r- '‘tatTlt i ! ~ JWp 7 -TtT life 3 7l||C .'K'X I' "I iSBSmBwZ dK THE WASHINGTON TIMES TAe National Daily SATURDAY-MAY 20—1933 1 1 TOONERVILLE TOPICS—By Fontaine Fom | Pop wortle,the 010 string Saver, waits for the Arsent-hindeo PROFESSOR REGULARLY EVERY MORNING AT THE GENERAL STORE A <S M g? I'll jAr />£ ' I J* Z * • ' M. The Daily Cross Word Puzzle i 1 T"" T" T"" 7™" a 1 q 10 77" ~ ’ }1 uzzzzizzzzzz 2» 22 23 '/// 24 7T~“ 26 2 ? 2& 2<? 30 ._ . 22/ 32 33 34 2/2 "35 ’ .-'z2z ... ~, —_ ——— ///.* 36 37 ZZZZZZ 38 38 zzzzfpizzzz I 4M 45 46 47 // /'/'' <2/ __ .., . _—. - szz/ 5 zz/ </ z 37 " 48—remoteness 50—dwarf animal 54— highest tone of Guido scale 55— source 56— medley 57— correlative of neither 58— eagles 50—network VERTICAL 1— textile fabric 2— anger HORIZONTAL I—religious ceremony s—seed of many legu minous plants 9—sooner than 12— pertaining to an his torical period 13 — town in Nevada 14— reward 15— hang in suspense 16 — endow with power 18—female sheep 20— brother’s daughters 21— humbled 24— product of coal 25— heavy wooden mallets 27—table land 31— auditory organ 32 — junk 35— tear 36— fall 38—list 40—S-shaped worm 43— showered 44— property 47— mistake Herewith is the solution to yes terday’s puzzle. »D|C| I jTRA pmc Al iM Manhattan’s Gayest Belle Trips Spryly at 85 NEW YORK.—Fanny Kirkman Is Manhattan’s most amazing hoyden, the perennial belle of the night clubs. Slender, graceful as her dancing partner, at 85 she finds youth in a highball, joie de vivre in a neatly tripped tango. The glamour of dawn through a Childs window after a round of the speaks is her special tonic. Time means nothing to her save when It’s the cocktail hour. Her duplex apartment which she shares with her friends, Mr. and Mrs. Milo Lemus, is an exultation of color—green, purple and gold—gay as the morning sun in springtime. Against her' living room wall on a massive buffet is a solid silver cocktail service—the birthday gift last week of her great-grandchildren the eldest of whom is 15. At ease in a wing chair, a KEEPS YOURwjjirrASTE FRESH M-IBJ IN EXPENSIVE ISFYINO ' ■ ■■ — —— 3— color 4— —first-born 5— fancier 6— evening (poetic) 7— regarding 8— water raising wheel having buckets on its rim 9— heroic narrative 10— tear down 11— -organs of vision CepyrltM. 1 IS S. Klni rntarM Bmdle«t». Im. Scotch and soda in her hand, a cigarette dangling from her lips, she flaunts at Time the bitterest of mockeries—laughter. “I ha<ve none. Except insofar as to deny all its isms and cults and theories and rituals. I’ve had enough of those. Only elderly people—of which I am not one, can understand what my girlhood meant to me. In hibited, proscribed, regulated, regimented; why, I never began to live until 10 years ago when I was 75, I came to New York. “All my life I’ve wanted to be free. That’s the goal I set for myself. When my husband died, some 10 years ago, I started stepping out, went to parties, traveled, experienced every kind of the gayest ex pression that I could. It is this that has recaptured my youth.” 17—microbe 19—strip of leather in a shoe 21— lying ready for sleep 22— support 23— combining form, at mosphere 26—South American monkey 28— ancient name for Ireland 29— propoption 30— imitated 33— avenues 34— give heed to 37—turf cut out of bogs 39—reflection maker 41— gaze 42— Spanish title 44— Paradise 45— store pit for green fodder 46— former Russian title 49—peruse 51— Mexican tree 52 — egg of a small insect 53 — foot ex tremity