The Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946 Page: 2 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Shiner Gazette and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Shiner Public Library.
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SHINER GAZETTE, SHINER. TEXAS
mm
COLDS’
___ isisseriss. ■.
At bedtime rub throat, chest and back
with Vicks VapoRub to ease coughing,
loosen up the phlegm, help relieve con-
gestion in upper bronchial tubes, invite
restful sleep. Relief comes as VapoRub
PENETRATES to upper bronchial
tubes with its special medicinal vapors,
STIMULATES chest and back sur-
faces like a warming poultice.
Often by morning most of the mis-
ery of the cold is gone I Remember—
ONLY VAPORUB Gives You this spe-
cial double action. It’s time-tested,
home-proved... the best-known home
remedy for reliev- « *« am
ing miseries of m# 0
children’s colds, w vapoRUD
H
YOU CAN BE SURE
St. Joseph means guaran-
teed quality and economy.
Demand St. Joseph Aspirin,
world’s largest seller at lOji.
Invest in Your Country—
Buy U. S. Savings Bonds!
TODAY'S BAKINGWAYS
b a home-baker’s textbook ... a book of
basic baking recipes... prepared in Huiman
& Company’s laboratory-kitchens and tested
by experts. Use •* to bring your favorite
baking recipes up-to-date.
Your name and address on a postcard
will bring you this new baking guide plus a
copy of the Clabber Girl Baking Book .
both absolutely free.
ADDRESS
HULMAN & COMPANY
Dept. W Terre Haute, Indiana
w
frv'Lt Good Housekeeping
mm
GET A 25'BOX
• due to fatigue, expo-
sure, colds or overwork.
Contains methyl salicylate,
effective pain-relieving
agent. _
Money-Back Guarantee
Made by McKesson & Robbins
or Safe by your druggist
BOBBY
SOX
By
Marty Links
u
*
X
“The one on the left asked me to go out, but the one on
the right doesn’t approve of me!”
CROSS
TOWN
Bv
Roland Coe
f
to
~=ii'
'CLASSIFIED
'department
' «—rv—<—^ ■■■ ■ ■■ITT
FARMS AND RANCHES
“Jim is a little over-optimistic. He’s awfully hopeful of
getting one of those 200,000 new cars!”
NANCY
By Ernie Bushmiller
I TOLD "SLUG<50 TO
MEET ME HERE,
AND HE'S AN HOUR
LATE
The Baking Powdef
with the
Balanced
Double Action
CLABBER GIRL
Dependable
LAXATIVE
CAUTION. T»K« ONLY AS DIMCIIS
s- NR -A
USE
666
arming in this pure, sciemmc prup«|A-
Ion. Just good ingredients that quickly
ct on the kidneys to increase the flow of
irine and ease discomforts of bladc.er lrn-
ation. All druggists sell Swamp Root.
MUTT AND JEFF
MAY I PLEASE
WAIT HERE
IN THE fT'OKAY
STORE ?
IT'S COLD
OUTSIDE / 1
SALE
~i rx
I WONDER
WHAT'S SO
FUNNY
STOCHIfiC
SALE
S?E^REE&i^lO
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
By VIRGINIA VALE j
qpAKE it from Charles
X Drake and Lois Collier—
“Don’t come to Hollywood as
a contest winner!” Teamed
as romantic leads in David L.
Loew’s “A Night in Casablan-
ca,” both learned that a lov-
ing cup is just something to
hold flowers. Drake won a person-
ality contest in New London, kicked
around Hollywood for five years be-
fore he got anywhere. Lois won a
beauty contest, but movie moguls
ignored her till she’d made a name
on the radio and the stage. Linda
Darnell won a contest, went home
to school for a year, then tackled
Hollywood successfully. Ann Sheri-
dan fought her way through menial
acting jobs before a press agent
dubbed her “The Oomph Girl.”
--
Natalie Wood, six-year-old Inter-
; national Picture starlet, will never
I forget “Tomorrow is Forever,” in
| which she made her screen debut;
j she went to New York for the pre-
I vat:
4-rc
101-ACRE FARM, 45 ACRES IN CULTI-
ration. 5 acres meadow, 51 ^cres pasture,
om house, smoke house-, barn, good
drinking water, spring water all year
round in pasture, telephone, located 10
miles east of La Grange, Texas, Fayette
County. Priced to sell for only $50.00 per
acre. Write or see MRS: HARRY CORDES,
| Fayetteville, Texas.
HELP WANTED—MEN
YOUNG NO WANTED
Experience Unnecessary
Splendid opportunity for permanent
work and advancement in large old-
established manufacturing plant.
Good wages, pleasant working condi-
tions. Sheet metal work, carpenter
work, wood assembly and bench work,
porcelain manufacturing and assem-
bly, sprayers, wood finishers, elec-
tricians, refrigeration mechanics and
various other trades.
ED FRIEDRICH, Inc.
1117 E. Commerce St., San Antonio, Tex.
By Bud Fisher
TH& WOOL v\/AS 6R0W/N IN
AUSTRAL IATHE CLOTH W/AS
WOVEN IN NEW ENGLAND, l
THE THREAD COMES PROM
iNDlA.THE SUIT WAS MADE
IN SCOTLAND ANDJ
BOUGHT IT
HERE
ISN’T IT vV0NDERFUL?\KanD BUTTONS’
.. I A —r— . A A.W OrADl C cOam
THAT so MANY PEOPLE
CAN MARE A LIVING OUT
SO ^ OF SOMETHING I havenY
[WHAt’JWjor —
mm
FROM, GERMANY/
AH ME'THIS IS '
A WONDERFUL
\COUNTRY!
TIME
'PAYMENTS
ARRANGED
MOST WONDERFUL
Country in
THE WORLD/
•e it *f
ANO
CAIHP
Ftjovf-
Japan
1^
LITTLE REGGIE
ID BETTER BRING
TEACHER AN APPLE
SO SHE WONT BAWL
ME OUT FOR BEING
LATE -'a
C' &
wr
r
OR WOULD AN ) jfr5»
ORANGE BE ’ ■’
BETTER ?
c?
i1/»f
LIKES
BANANAS
IVE GOT
IT /
Bv Margarita
\»/
JITTER
By Arthur Pointer
n
xl
m
c;
u'
idea
u.
Ej
J[
pL-L
"3E
:3B
m..
A
REG’LAR FELLERS
By Gene Byrnes
MV WORD.'
THE BATHROOM
PIPES MUST Bt
LEAKING/ LOOK.
AT THAT WATER1
I I i
Ci
I X RUN AND GET \ ^ I
SOME. ROTS AND *-* 1
PANS, BOVS, WHILE
, ^ l PHONE THE . .
j V PLUMBER! j *
5 j 7 OKAY,
» l moM/
RIGHT.’
msii
NO USE
TAKlN’ THESE,
WE COULD PUT
THAT SITUATION
T’WORK! ^/HOW
DO YA
MEAN’
THIS WILL \ I
SAVE. YA FROM A. J
WATERIN’THEM I, .
LATER ON, MOM! /h 1
i
VIRGIL
By LenKleis
COLD PREPARATIONS
MQUID, TABLETS, SALVE, NOSE DRQP5
CAUTION—USE ONLY AS DIRECTED
iTgetting up nights
getting you down?
Thousands say famous doctor’s
discovery gives blessed relief from
irritation of the bladder caused by
excess acidity in the urine
Why suffer needlessly from backaches,
run-down feeling from acidity in
the urine? Just try DR. KILMERS
SWAMP ROOT, the renowned herbal
medicine. SWAMP ROOT acts fast on the
kidneys to promote the flow of urine ®n“
relieve troublesome excess acidity. Origi-
nally created by a practising physician,
Dr Kilmer’s is a carefully blended combi-
JH2
A'V-’L
in
ii
r. « A
HOW WOULD YOU
UKE A POKE /, o
IN TH*
NOSE. -
SILENT SAM
By Jeff Hayes
"THREE-LETTER- WORD
MEANING A SMALL
REPORT
m
MISCELLANEOUS
SPECIAL BARGAINS. We have them.
Repaired
)d rain-
. Wool
ens :ioc. iviesKits 35c.
ckets $4.45. Wool pants
. rain-
Wool
Army used surplus merchandise
soldier’s good shoes $1.65. Extra goc
coats $3,00. Feather pillows $1.00
s 35c. Meskits 35<
Cups 25c. Field jackets $4.
and shirts, underwear, khaki pants—
shirts. Also new items, finest tarpaulins,
wall tents, puptents, canvas cots, mat-
tresses, etc. All postage prepaid. Write
Wichita Falls
ts,
postage i
BLANK’S EXCHA1
Texas.
ORANGES, bushel baskets SEEDLESS
oranges, sweet and juicy, delivered to
your home express prepaid only $4.00.
H. H. WHIPPLE, San Benito, R. 3, Texas.
Buy U. S. Savings Bonds!
wim ,
* aL
NATALIE WOOD
mi ere—her first trip on a train; her
first glimpse of snow. But she is
looking forward to getting home,
because a new baby was expected
soon after her return, and Natalie
is hoping it’ll be a baby brother.
-^-
Six ravishing beauties are need-
ed for “Bel Ami,” which will star
George Sanders. But — they must
fit into the 1880 period of the story.
Reproductions of lovely ladies pic-
tured by Renoir, Manet, Degas and
Toulouse-Lautrec will be used as
a guide in choosing the gals.
_\y
Joan Edwards, who sings the na-
tion’s top tunes on the “Hit Parade”
each Saturday night, is booked to
star in Republic’s forthcoming pic-
ture, “Hit Parade of 1947,” which
will be one of the most expensively
produced films made by the com-
pany this year.
The “Green Room Award” on the
Andrews Sister’s “N-K Musical
Showroom” over CBS Wednesday
nights has become so popular that
the girls will star in a movie to be
called “The Green Room,” with
their guest stars.
si/ *
Leo Gorcey, as Bob Burns’ stooge
on Bob’s Thursday night program,
is a dim-witted oaf, but he’s quite
different in real life. One of the
original “Dead End Kids,” Gorcey
has just finished his 46th picture,
and is under contract to make four
movies per year. A shrewd busi-
ness man, knowing a lot about show
business, he acted as associate pro-
ducer and writer on his last picture.
Kate Smith, who celebrates her
15th anniversary on the air May 1,
has broadcast all her programs on
CBS. As the first lady of the air,
she’s won as staggering list of
awards. Her war bond sales topped
the $200,000,000 mark, and in a one-
week air campaign she brought
25,000 other Smiths to blood plasma
stations. Ted Collins says she made
more than 6,300 personal appear-
ances for worthy causes.
We’ve had a lot of nice ghosts
in the movies — Cary Grant and
Constance Bennett in the “Topper”
films, Spencer Tracy in “A Guy
Named Joe,” Robert Montgomery
in “Here Comes Mr. Jordan.” Ed-
ward Everett Horton joins the ranks
in “The Ghost Goes Wild.”
Drew Miller, former master ser-
geant in the U. S. air force, got a
bit role in “Till the End of Time”
because of Producer Dore Schary’s
insistence on using war veterans in
bit roles. Then Miller got a factory
job pressing phonograph records.
After seeing how he made his small
role stand out, RKO tracked
him down, signed him up, and plans
a romantic build-up for him.
-*-
ODDS AND ENDS—A symphony
orchestra of 115 pieces will perform in
Warner Bros.’ “Humoresquestarring
Joan Crawford and John Garfield. . . .
Orson Welles lost 20 pounds in 20 days,
then had to put it back on in a week
for a one-minute scene which had been
added to “Tomorrow Is Forever”. . .
Sonja Henie, who owns one of the larg-
est collection of emeralds in the world,
consented to their being used in one of
the boudoir sequences of “The Countess
of Monte Cristo”. . . James Burke
grew such a fine crop of whiskers for
Paramount’s “Easy Come, Easy Go”
that he was kept on for “California.”
EASE YOUR
COLD’S
MISERIES THESE 3 WAYS
Grandma’s mutton suet
idea made better by sci-
ence, that’s Penetro. Rub
it on and (1) Ease chest
muscle tightness and
soreness. (2) Relieve
pain at nerve ends in the
skin. (3) Loosens phlegm,
coughing lessens, as
vapors help you breathe
easier. Favorite for chil-
dren, all the family, 25c,
double supply 35c. Get
PENETRO
SPECIAL MUTTON SUET BASE
veronica
laRe h,
star of,
V*'vn, af ^
one
BrWp°rt’Co°n- toOT1|
CALOX
for quick relief
m
---
A Soothing Q A | IC'
ANTISEPTIC Eaa W
Used by thousands with satisfactory re-^
suits for 40 years—six valuable ingredi-
ents.' Get Carboil at drug stores or write
Spurlock-Neal Co., Nashville, Tenn.
Beware Coughs
from ummm colds
That Hang On
Creomulsion relieves promptly be-
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to help loosen^ and_ expel
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, B ronchitis
WNU—P
11—46
And Your Strength and
Energy Is Below Par
It may be caused by disorder of kid-
ney function that permits poisonous
waste to accumulate. For truly many
people feel tired, weak and miserable
when the kidneys fail to remove excess
acids and other waste matter from the
blood- » . , .
You may suffer nagging backache,
rheumatic pains, headaches, dizziness,
getting up nights, leg pains, swelling.
Sometimes frequent and scanty urina-
tion with smarting and burning is an-
other sign that something is wrong with
the kidneys or bladder. ,
There should be no doubt that prompt
treatment is wiser than neglect. Use
Doan’s Pills. It is better to rely on a
medicine that has won countrywide ap-
proval than on something less favorably
known. Doan’s have been tried and test-
ed many years. Are at all drug stores.
Get Doan’s today.
DOAN SPILLS
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Lane, Ella E. The Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 14, 1946, newspaper, March 14, 1946; Shiner, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1144583/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Shiner Public Library.