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Show THE LEIII SUN, LEW, UTAH Kathleen Norris Says: The Half -Hearted Wife From Yard if cfB -w awa A-Jsi i n ITiim.r.l'"tyi .1 i l! yara 01 flowered l JusttrycuttingtheposL.il spreading around tot feet. Tint . faded batffl 15 1 wl ill iiim i CROSS TOWN Bv Poland Cod fa "Hello, ma my team just trailed me to Burke's drug store for nine ice cream sodas!" NANCY PUT IT I OF OF MUTT AND JEFF LITTLE REGGIE JITTER REG'LAR FELLERS VIRGIL SILENT SAM 1 1 WANT A 10 CENT jf j I VAMII LA SUNDAE P5 1 I AND DON'T BE STINGY ) (f THIS , ' V. , CHERRIES, r- s twe VeTC-ETcy S7I AREY!if ""'iFOR?)1 A 'cKT MAHlll HELP it , , -J T Tv5 i man ok the Hi lVh -nwH0 GOSH LOOKY,1IAFWELLYll' C0ME 0N. STINKY,- AT ALL THE THERE'S NO-ONE HOME J GOT NO GOLF CU)B V. s -v I SO -HOW KIN f?J SOKX.! ENOUGH SYRUP ON AND GIVE rAB PLENTY ICE CREAM--AND LOTS NUTS AND CHERRIES, ETC. -ETC. SyHUKT COULD PINHEAD DO ON ) I A GOLF COUR-bT J . I ANVWAY5? 1 SEARCH r HE 5 TOO UUfno V mt' V TCADOY y ' " efn BOBDY SOX Marty Links "Isn't your ankle feeling any better yet, Garfield?" OH, MAKE YOUR OWN SUNDAE I GIVE UP! -THIS 15 MYDAO'Sl m?Ntw UKtootK! BOV- ' EH FELLERS' 7 V BRANCH! J ' WHAT A ) ( LOOK.' MIND IF I y&S . .SWAT J) A HOLE ) V GO THROUGH ) JBIT' ' By Ernie Bushmiller By Bad Fisher By Margarita By Arthur Pointer By Gene Byrnes By Len Kleii By Jeff Hayes Bell Syndicate. "To get a good look at Roberta' thing for Dick." By KATHLEEN NORRIS ON MY desk lies a letter from a girl of 24, an v nffinp trirl in an Illinois e-" city, who is going to be married mar-ried in June.' Roberta is going go-ing to have a church and home wedding, with bridesmaids; brides-maids; she's going to a pretty new home after a California honeymoon; she's going to have well-to-do relatives-in- aw who apparently can't do enough for her and she is smugly miserable. She Is miserable because six years ago she had a wild, passion ate young love affair with a boy named Archie. Archie led her on for some months with the idea of marriage, mar-riage, and then left without a good- by and broke her heart. She has told Dick all about Archie. "I've told Dick," says her letter, that I'm afraid I don't feel for him what I ought to feel. We're con genial; I'll have a fine position in the community when I'm married; admire everything about Dick, but still there's always the memory of Archie. Dick has been patience it self about it; he wanted to be mar ried before he went into the serv Ice, in 1942, and every time he was home on leave, but how can I give myself to one man however fine, with the lingering love for my girl hood's sweetheart always In the background? My mother detested Archie, and she loves Dick. Everyone thinks I'm lucky, but I don't want to make a mistake. Would it be wiser for me to break, even now, and stay true to Archie, even though he may never come back, or Is it enough to have the husband completely de voted, and will what I can give Dick be enough for him?" ii seems incredible to me, Roberta, I say in answer, that any woman in the world is still clinging cling-ing to this romantic Victorian de lusion. Oat of Date Attitude. Sixty or seventy years ago it was fashionable for any vaporous and simpering young female to flatter herself that "her heart was another's," anoth-er's," but at the same time to give her hand to the prosperous, devoted and satisfactory partner. Many an engaged girl, even now, rather likes the fancy that she will be more adored than adoring, and that she may capriciously dole out favors to the grateful male, often reminding him that he told her, in engagement days, that just to have her would be enough, and he would some day win her love. In engagement days, yes. But what an awakening is ahead of romantic Roberta, if Dick is the kind of man who sweeps these rosy cobwebs aside, once the marriage is an accomplished fact, and becomes be-comes bored when Roberta wants to enter Into a sweet, saccharine confession of her earlier attachment, attach-ment, and expresses regret that she has not given and cannot give Dick her entire heart Years ago I saw a mawkish movie called "The Loves of Anatole." I think it was in that movie that the bride had a heart-shaped aperture carved in her bedroom door. The groom, when wishing to enter, presented pre-sented bunches of blossoms at this little look-out. and the coy bride accepted ac-cepted them as only her due. Roberta belongs in that movie. If she has good sense she will wake up, forget the high school "3T Should I stay true to Archie . . .- WNXJ Features. one-time ideal would be a wholesome SWEET MEMORIES 0ten when a girl is about to marry, she can't help recalling re-calling some sweetheart of the past. Frequently it was her first experience with love, and the thrilling memory remains re-mains bright. She wonders if she really should go through with her marriage perhaps that first man will come back, if she will only wait. Such a problem faces Roberta, who is asking Miss Norris for advice ad-vice in today's article. On the face of it, she is verv fortunate. The man she intends to marry is well edu-j cated and successful. He has an inherited fortune, andi well-to-do relatives. She can look foncard to a honeymoon in California, and a pretty new home. Everybody in the new family likes her, and she in turn likes them. Nevertheless, Roberta isn't happy. She can't get over the joy of the days when she was in love with Archie. He never amounted to anything, but he seemed to be the answer to all Roberta's dreams. When he left without saying goodbye good-bye it broke her heart. Now that she is about to marry Dick, she still hopes there is some chance that Archie will come bach to her. beau, appreciate that she is a lucky woman, and Instead of simpering sim-pering complacently as Richard attempts at-tempts to win her love, will set herself her-self in good serious whole-hearted affection to win his. A Visit from Archie. Perhaps the luckiest thing that could happen to them both would be to have Archie, the breaker of hearts and engagements, return to town. Archie had no prospects, no job, no sense of honor, six years ago he probably hasn't any of these now. To get a good look at Roberta's one-time ideal would be a wholesome thing for Dick, and save him much annoyance in the fu ture, and the thought that she couldn't do any better than Archie, at 18, would be highly salutory to Roberta. Her wistful reminiscences would lose some of their effectiveness effective-ness with Archie hanging around the house. wo ghosts out of a woman's past can be quite as embarrassing as her one-time lovers. Awkward brothers, severe fathers, exacting or boring uncles and aunts these sne can stana. She can stand to have Dick dine with sister Mollie and the swarming babies and the disorderly dinner table and the noise and breakage and yelling. But when her dream-boy of senior year high shows up, ' laughing mupjoiy ai Humiliating old mem. ories, calling her the pet name that ""iicu uer 10 me soul, expecting ex-pecting certain affectionate familiar ities nke holding hands in mtblic and occasionally kissing, then Roberta's soui snnvels within her, and she wjsuei ujat ne were 1,000 miles way. If Richard was smart he would write to Archie and ask him to spend a week-end with himself and nooerta in their new home time. some- REALLY QUIET! v "f.Ve J0? ever heard your heart "it weu, you can in can in the new rarmiy sound laboratory, latest t TV Illinois Institute of Technology. Donated by the Parm-ly Parm-ly Foundation for Auditory Research, Re-search, the lab Is an 18 by 20-foot IS if 24-inch fibElass spikes s iuc i0ur waus sound. Modeled after tori's mK. to a absorb similar " "-'vara, tne room rests on rubber cads sun.j k concrete piers, the whofe of which 5EHAND I " 'j OR USE I tc0u jL-i ft sss1 &l c4- j;iiHnn- apply a stunning big rn corner, use others on towels- ft orl jt see id for us. S.W.f " from . r B. i. i. aKe Your Own V lams." 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