Fun for tlielWhole Family . SPARKY WATTS By BOODY ROGERS AM-THBK* TW' V TMKVM WHO TOOK ^ DOCf (tAV MACHINE 1 -WILL THEM FACES J M UP AFTER J they kk* that y WINDSHIELD ?? T WHOAp ?sY vour k machme, \ poc-thofe 1 furs worr . bother rr J asmn.' ' 0uT,?nwncY THCWe MEM MCE nm couiMiiiny -I -RXP "EM TO orcvcHMcae THEM^ELKK ONE MMUTE WFTM ^TH'IWM- J r?"THEN KfOU. 1 "THEY COULD 1 00 ANY CMMA6E 1 THE 00* WOOLS 1 FACE AMP "THEY'D . eksnb. of A AN* r *EU-.THEY'RE mu. PiCKJNS 6LA95 OITTOP L THE*? PACES f WHEJfE I LEFT I ?EM-rU. V take rr \BACK/ V I R G I L By LEN KLEIS 1>WS \ I FORGOT / TO LET \ h^J ' I'M GLAD THAT'S ) S DONE / w REG'LAR FELLERS?Prompt Customer* By GENE BYRNES f *IF A MAN BUILDS \ A BETTER. MOUSETRAP I THAN HIS NEIGHBOR, I i TH' WHOLE WORLD J i WILL BEAT A PATH J V TO HIS DOOR' y WHAT SWELL) ~1 ADVICE^y and here's^?\ ' where. i start \ build)n" th' worlds \ best mousetrap ? \ that sayin' was right J . up my alley: y /AN HERE COfAES / TH' WORLD AW HIS \ ONCLE. BEATIN' f DOWN MY DOOR. I WITH HONORS AN' VOUCHES AWSUOV/ SHEY!\ i CUT OLTT T ' THAT / WHATo TH VlOWL ii "n/iL 'stop it pya hear? f HIRE. A (SHIPYARD /?/??* firf. j _ i can't sleep'. w The M I D D L E S By BOB KAkP AD,C*A?.V/IU_ YV*AH,XU_DO 1 you BMPTX THE A IT BUTI anu_ VACUUM BAG A.THIMIC yOUT2* FOB MS? I NEVEtt\C?LISae*mv SBEM ABi-B TO <*T) WBUPLBSS/ ITON ANOOFF _ ^ > If -?. Twe-rttou?l* with you is \ tm*ryoudontuse >oj? j mkad about mechanical. / things/ thvrs au.vuh / ' vootta do- f^ -usevoub. head a POP?Ah Apt Definition I 11 WW DON'T WANT ANV hypocrites i HERE ! ^-po you ekZXT knov 3 WHAT A A H/POCRITE IS YES ! A MAKI WHO COMES ON i PARADE , I SMILING / J By J. MILLAR WATT CROSS TOWN Bv Roland Coc "??'I *mtj a pay, M to am tote 3 kafcy ta*!" PRIVATE BUCK n CtjfclMfe "Cut wt itof km, rifht to mrt widwot |ujmcm j \f ANY years ago Ellsworth i ! Vines, the star tennis player, and not a bad golfer, made this re mark? "It's surprising how long it takes a fellow to get into hard competitive condition?and what a short time it takes to get out again." And Vines was a hard trainer. This happens to be completely true. It is one answer to Guilder Unonn'e oknnrina in the recent IC 4A games at Madison Square Garden where he practical ly collapsed in the mile run. Haegg, the great Swedish flash, oudoors and in shape, has run the mile in 4.02. He was timed around 4.31 over an indoor track with no chance to train, soon after he landed. This means a lost or missing mar gin close to 29 seconds?or some thing more than 150 yards. In the best mile that Haegg ever ran he would have beaten Rafferty's 4:16.4 mile by over 90 yards. For a 4.16 mile is barely more than a gallop. Looking as far back as Joie Ray, a i 4 IS mile wnvld ha"p a com mon canter for the old-timer. Rafferty has always been a fight ing miler. Then we had Nurmi's 4:10.4. And Nurmi was one of the great runners of all time. From that mile to 10,000 meters. From that point on down to Arne Andersson's record mile in 4:1.6 we have seen the records fall?via Glen Cunning ham, Lovelock, Haegg and others who hammered the figures down, split second by split second. But in all this natural ability has needed the hardest sort of work, plus able trainers and able coaches who have yet to receive the credit they deserved. Gander Hmecs The Greatest Race To me the mile has always been the greatest of all races. It com bines more in the way of speed and stamina than any other distance. The 100 yards?the 220?even the quarter?are largely speed tests. Al though it must be admitted that the 440 yard dash, or the quarter, is also a killing distance, calling for extended speed. But the mile is something in between the sprints and the longer distance races, leading up to the marathon. The average, normal human be ing from city and farm, usually talks and thinks in terms of the mile. It is a mile to some place?or 5 miles?or 10 miles. You know just about what that means. The mile today is the ideal com bination of speed and stamina?a race that draws and keeps the crowds interest. The 100 and the 220 are over in too much of a hurry while the 2 and 3 mile races are too long to watch. In this country most of our best running has been turned in from the 100 yard dash to the mile. We have had few runners with the pati ence to train for longer distances. We have been better at the shorter distances with Paddock, Wykoff, To lan, Jesse Owens, and many others. Here it was largely a matter of a flash?or half a stride. But the main or major goal in track racing has been to reach the mile in four minutes flat. Here is something that demands both speed and stamina to the ultimate limit. The time may come when some one will beat four minutes. But that is the big target now. Arne Andersson has brought the mile to just a trifle more than a second from the four minute mark. Four minutes will be reached and beaten, but hardly through the war period. For with all the ability one may have, there is still the matter of condition and hard training through a long period. For example, Gunder Haegg is still the greatest distance runner in the world, over the one, two and three-mile tests. His record is one of the most amazing in all sport. Yet, out of condition, his last show ing at the mile and his best showing at the mile, are close to 29 seconds apart. We have always believed there are no supermen in sport. Records are only made to be broken. What they all want is the target. Sooner or later they bowl this target over. It has been said?"There is no substitute for work." Also?"There is no substitute for experience." Cer tainly in a mile run there is no sub stitute for a long, hard training pe riod that brings the legs and the wind working together as a team. And that goes for a Mercury. Tops in Training While we're speaking of condi tion, if anyone cares to know about the all-tiine top in physical training, it wouldn't be a bad idea to visit the.four navy pre-Aight schools at North Carolina, Georgia, St. Mary's and Iowa. These four major pre flight headquarters were first set up by Com dr. Tom Hamilton, carried on by Comdr. Frank Wickhorst and are now under Comdr. "Killer" Kane. In addition to the academic and military side they have done an incredible Job of conditioning, Plain Draped Valance With Sheer Curtains C*VEN the plainest of straight net *-J or scrim curtains will take on an air of elegance without being too formal if you add a simple draped valance. Such a valance is also pretty with ruffled curtains, and it may be made of figured chintz as well as of plain material. Festoon rings at the upper cor ners of the window frame are all that you need in the way of dra pery fixtures. The diagrams show how to cut and line the valance which is pulled through these rings. You can avoid piecings by using 36-inch-wide material cut lengthwise. A half width makes the depth of the valance. The length is the width of the window plus the amount to hang down at each side. ? ? ? NOTE?This curtain idea is from the 32-page booklet MAKE YOUR OWN CUR TAINS by Ruth Wyeth Spears. This book let shows you the newest and most appro prate enrtr'n ard drapery styles for rll types cf v.' "' vs with cutting and ma!:ing methods fully illustrated. To get a copy enclose 15 cents with name and address direct to: MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Bedford Hills New York Drawer IS Enclose 15 cents for booklet "Make Your Own Curtains." Name Address ? m SNAPPY FACTS I ABOUT RUBBER There or* two big "unknowns" In trying to anticipate ttio eventual "balance of power" between natu ral and synthetic rubber/m the opin ion of John L Collyer, President of The ft. F. Goodrich Co. These un knowns ore respective production costs and the relative value of these types of rubber In different kinds of products several years hence. During the manufacture of oee variety of synthetic rub ber, millet iuIs must be kept at a temperature of 100 da Use of rayon has improved the performance of synthetic truck tires ? as much as 375 percent compared with tires made of cotton cord, some Industry authorities report ^Goodrich] at first m am ;ol.D w u?666 | Co Id Pnpatatlan* g? direct*! DONT SEED SOYBEANS '7 WITHOUT O Don't ride your load, labor and aaad ? ?. inoculate wide NITBAGIN. Gin soybean* wore rigor to figbt weeds and drought. Get bigger, nirer craps and coose.ee sod fertility. NITBAGIN is lent, ossd by f arwen for 45 yoaea. Casts about 12 csots an acre, takes a few win ners to use. Produced by trained scien tists in a sso dun labor story. Gat it, in the yellow can, at saad dealers. w?Writ, tmtmr See bee m> lilts wed art* Ib^wh booklets. AM im below. ? ?*?*. ? ?. H ? It?