PrivateEye
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 159
- Location
- Boston, MA
It always starts as an innocent bathing-suit modeling job...
(One Size Fits All.)
It always starts as an innocent bathing-suit modeling job...
(One Size Fits All.)
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President Roosevelt told the country last night that the war has reached its turning point, but warned against premature "exultation." Speaking to the New York Herald Tribune Forum in an address also broadcast by radio, the President acknowledged that "we have had an uphill fight all the way, and it will continue to be uphill, all the way. There can be no coasting to victory." The President particularly cautioned against listening to "war discussions of the uninformed," or to "blustering war critics" who are "actuated by political motives." He pointed out that those not in possession of all the facts must speak based "on guesswork based on information of doubtful accuracy," "Loose talk," he stressed, "is the damp that gets into the powder. We prefer to keep our powder dry."
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("What used stockins? I been we...
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A forty-year-old man convicted last year of mail fraud was found guilty yesterday of using a recess in that trial to swindle an elderly Williamsburg widow out of her life savings. Joseph Rosenberg was convicted yesterday in Brooklyn Felony Court of defrauding 74-year-old Mrs. Emma D. Voickmann of 111 South 9th Street out of $8150, which included all the cash she had on hand and all she could raise by borrowing additional funds and selling a mortgage, for which "commission" Rosenberg promised, he could find a buyer for oil stock for which she had paid $5000 some years ago. Rosenberg posed as "a former German Army officer" in furtherance of this scheme. Judge Louis Goldstein commended the jury for its verdict, noting that Rosenberg's operations across the United States have been "noted for their audacity."
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(Look, Dale, I'm a fan from way back, and I really want you to make good here -- so please tell Herb he needs to explain the characters he already has before he suddenly causes new ones to materialize out of thin air. Just a tip, OK?)
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"Hey," says Joe. "Sump'n f' Leonora f' Chris'mas!" "Yeah," says Sally. "But let's get'm at Namm's. Remember 'at time we was inna city, an' I seen Killgallen comin' outa Bloomin'dales? "Oh yeah," replies Joe. "You really t'ink anybody t'ere would remembeh t'at?" "*I* remembeh t'at," growls Sally. "Little Miss Poifeck w'itta white gloves on an'neh nose inna aieh. LA DE DAH." "Y'didn't hafta trip her," says Joe. "Who says I tripp'teh? She wawrkin wheah I put my foot, t'at's awl."
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Wait'll he finds out he's getting Postum.
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K, Rouge -- time to skip town. OH WAIT THERE'S NO TOWN LEFT!
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I actually performed in a play like that once. I had coffee thrown at me four times, and also non-dairy creamers. I don't normally do a lot of physical comedy, so it was a bit of a stretch, but it looks good on my resume.
A bit of investigation, by the way, reveals that "Hugh Striver" actually began on October 5th, but the Eagle didn't pick it up until about a month in. So we are, in fact, behind on the story -- but not enough not to be able to recognize that these two lunkheads ARE OBVIOUS NAZI SPIES. Or, if Dale wants to be really timely, they could be agents of the Bureau of Licensing on their way to investigate a new show that's opened with a baggy-pants comic and a stripper. Maybe we'll get special guest appearances by Joe Besser and Lois DeFee.
("NOW LISSEN!" bellows Sally into the mouthpiece of the payphone at Schriebstein's Candy Store. "Ya CAN'T hieh Durocheh an' fieh Dressen! 'At's like keepin' t' MOUT', but gettin' ridda t' BRAIN!" "Hey," interrupts Joe, rapping on the phone booth. "Leonoreh's fussin'." "NO!" retorts Sally. "I DON' WANT NO MOOSE HEAD!")
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With coffee rationing due to begin in ten days, consumers in Brooklyn are howling at the "extension" of their favorite beverage by cereal substitutes. The operators of the Bickford's restaurant chain acknowledged today that the use of cereal fillers to stretch out the coffee supply has been a complete failure, with customers "telling the restaurants where to get off" in such strong language that the chain has abandoned the plan entirely and has returned to serving pure coffee only. If, chain officials emphasize, this means the coffee supply runs out from time to time, Bickford restaurants will simply tell consumers they are out of coffee and not attempt to offer a substitute beverage.
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...Once Book No. 1 expires, householders will be required declare the quantity of coffee they have on hand, and a corresponding number of stamps will be removed from the new War Ration Book No. 2 to reflect that amount. ...
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Reader A. H. Eastmond writes in to declare that "no news item appearing recently is more gratifying to the people" than the news that trolley service may be restored on the Fulton Street and Putnam and Gates Avenue lines. "If ever there was a crime committed in the name of reform, it was the stupid removal of the trolley cars." Eastmond adds that the change back to trolleys "can't come too quick to please the people who are disgusted by the buses."
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Former fight manager Hymie Caplin, serving a five to ten year sentence at Sing Sing after he was convicted in 1940 of participation in a ring of card sharks that fleeced unwitting out-of-town visitors in a series of Broolkyn hotel rooms, has asked Governor Herbert Lehman to grant him executive clemency. In his request that his sentence be reduced to time served, Caplin stated that his wife is ill.
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(Reading between the lines of Mr. Parrott's column, we can infer that the reason why Mr. Dressen will not be back in 1943 has something to do with his prowess at the card table. But nobody could possibly levy such a charge against Fitz, SO WHY ARE THEY TRYING TO SEND HIM TO MONTREAL???? HE DOESN'T EVEN SPEAK FRENCH!)
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(Meanwhile, in hundreds of Brooklyn candy stores, bets are hurriedly placed on 296, 874, 113, 919, 717, 261, 822, 228, and 919. BECAUSE THAT'S HOW THIS WORKS)
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And in the Daily News...
I personally saw one of my own junior high teachers slam a kid's head thru a wall, and throw another kid down a flight of stairs, and another kid over a desk. But we haven't heard anything up to now to indicate that Mr. Goodman was quite so hands-on in his job.
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The old lady's been trying to dump the place for years.
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Those who can't do...
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I still think Hennick could outfly, outbrag, and outslang Flip any day of the week.
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Soviet forces, in hot pursuit of the shattered remnants of a routed German army in the southern Caucasus, have captured an important mountain southeast of Nalchik, battlefront dispatches reported today. The official Soviet government newspaper Isvestia speculated today that this latest Red Army victory will raise the curtain on a big winter offensive that will "rock the Germans from one end of the front to the other." The communique further reported only light action around Stalingrad, where the Soviets are in "full command of the situation," as well as substantial Red Army advances on the Volkhov front, below Leningrad.
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Four residents of Woodside, Queens face trial today on a charge of operating a bingo game because, in the words of Magistrate Peter M. Horn, "the legislature hasn't gumption enough to legalize bingo." The four suspects were arrested by Captain Louis Goldberg of the Elmhurst precinct, who reported that they were operating a bingo parlor at the National Hall in Woodside on November 5th, under the auspices of the Harry M. Sullivan Association. The defendants admitted running the games as a fundraiser for the Boy Scouts, the USO, and other patriotic organizations. "I have no personal objection to allowing bingo games where the proceeds are used entirely for charity or churches," declared Magistrate Horn. "But it remains for the legislature to legalize them."
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(Y'got me so confused we awrmos' ended up wit' a moosehead.")
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(And "OH!" yells Sally. "YA LOOKIN F' INFIELDEHS? WELL T'EAHS A SWELL ONE ONNA PITTSBOIGS!")
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("I didn't put in four years of nursing school just to be 'a doctor's wife,' you philandering fathead! SO THERE!")
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("SEE WHAT HAPPENS?" yells Butch. "SEE WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU DON'T KEEP A FIRM HAND?")
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"Here, let me demonstrate. Sandy! Come here boy! NOW WHERE DID THAT DOG GET TO?"
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About Postum, my father drank it when I was young and me too. I drank coffee at grandma's house with milk and sugar until I drank so much that I gat a bad headache. I was abut 6 or 7. Still a java hound."It's odd, but Burma warned me about 'premature exultation,' or I believe that's what she called it anyway," thinks a confused Terry to himself.
"Darn it, I told that copy boy to make sure "wash your old stockings" was underlined."
"...was found guilty yesterday of using a recess in that trial to swindle an elderly Williamsburg widow out of her life savings."
Now that takes nerve. Also, there is no way on earth this man couldn't make an honest living, and a good one, if he wanted to.
This strip is the comic world's equivalent of those very-low-budget off-off broadway theaters productions where everyone in the audience is one of the actor's friends and there's no scenery or costumes. Plus, the dialogue makes no sense (but sounds "artsy"), yet you still have to sit there for two stupid hours because you can't hurt your idiot friend's feelings.
Oh Sally.
Oh, he'll know if he's drinking Postum. In the recorded history of time, the only person on earth who ever drank that stuff when they didn't have to is my mother.
Yup, save the yellow-haired one (since that is what all young, pretty women in Asia do when there's trouble) and skedaddle the heck out of there.
(This gets interesting -- exactly why, and how, is the Curtis Publishing Company involved in this? That's not some shady publisher of race sheets and sex pulps. Curtis Publishing is the firm that puts out three of the most rock-ribbed respectable big-name magazines in all of 1942: the Saturday Evening Post -- unofficial house organ of the National Association of Manufacturers --the Ladies Home Journal, and the Country Gentleman. Exactly what is a blue-blooded. white-shoed Philadelphia concern like this, raking in many millions each year from the top advertisers in the United States, and otherwise having no connection whatever with the seamy world of small-time gambling, doing running a penny-ante race wire in Brooklyn? Has no one thought to ask that? J. Edgar, phone call for you.)
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All retail sales of coffee in the United States will stop as of midnight tomorrow, and will remain frozen for one week to allow retailers sufficient time to stock their shelves in preparation for the start of coffee rationing on November 29th. Thereafter the greatest coffee-drinking nation in the world will be limited to one pound per person over the age of 15 every five weeks -- a ration which works out to no more than one cup per day per person. The reduction will mean a 38 percent reduction in sales to the 80 percent of adult Americans who drink coffee. Meanwhile, butter and cheese will follow coffee onto the ration list, with a top-ranking Government official reporting that the Federal Government is about to take full and strict control over the distribution of all milk products, with cheese and butter to be rationed, but not, as yet, fluid milk. A forerunner of that development is seen in the War Production Board order issued last night freezing for war use approximately 40 percent of the nation's present supply of cold-storage butter -- a quantity amounting to approximately 35,000,000 pounds.
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The Eagle Editorialist declares that "little would have been accomplished" by sending the Zoot Suit killers to the electric chair, and notes that "the community in general bears a large responsibility for it, as it does in all crimes of this sort, which, in the final analysis grow as much from poor environment as from inherent faults." The EE notes that the two youths will be eligible for parole in 13 years, "and if the prison and probation machinery of the state are what they should be, they should not come out as hardened criminals at 29 and 32 respectively."
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Bette Davis takes offense at the talk now going around suggesting that she has gotten fat. She says during her recent bond-selling tour, she found a lot of citizens gaping at her in disbelief at the evidence that she has not, in fact, put on the poundage. "I don't know what they expected," Miss Davis responds, "but they did seem slightly startled to discover that I am a pretty normal human being. And not fat."
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(Yesterday Scarlett wore a polka-dot suit. Today she is in a solid color suit. How many women's bathing suits does Uncle Creepy own? Never mind, I don't want to know.)
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And in the Daily News...
"Mrs. Rosoff fears her husband has returned to Mexico City to open a nightclub with the former King Carol of Romania." I hate when that happens.
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"But we aren't even paratroopers!" "Oh, you will be when you hit the ground."
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Just how old is this kid, anyway? He'll be in the Army by summer.
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(Somewhere in North Africa, Pvt. Solomon J. Pincus sighs and, as he dissolves the dry brown powder in his canteen cup, wishes he had a good cup of coffee.)
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The nation's school buses will face strict new regulations if they are to keep their rations of gasoline and tires in 1943. A new set of rules promulgated by Defense Transportation Director Joseph B. Eastman state that as of February 1st, no school bus may transport any student, teacher, or school employee living less than two miles from their school, or less than a mile and a half from the connection point to a school bus trunk route. All use of buses for transportation of athletic teams, or for class trips or other extracurricular activities is banned as of that same date. Bus stops must be spaced at least one eighth of a mile, but preferably one-quarter of a mile apart. Exceptions may be made for pupils who are physically handicapped, or would otherwise be subjected to extreme danger or personal hardship if they were required to walk to school.
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Magistrate Charles Solomon lashed out yesterday at salvage officials over the matter of the towering mounds of household scrap which have remained at collection points across the borough since the summer salvage campaigns. Pointing out that scrap metal sold to Japan before the war somehow found its way from New York to Tokio, Magistrate Solomon demanded to know why efforts to move the present scrap heaps from the city to the steel mills have not been completed. Residents are asking the same question, he noted, pointing out that the mountains of junk are a dangerous menace to public safety where children are climbing and playing every day, and the parents of those children deserve an answer. "The people don't give a damn what the merits of the official arguments may be," declared the Magistrate. "They want the scrap removed." He further observed that people have been seen pulling items off the scrap piles for themselves, despite having contributed such items to the salvage campaign last summer.
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The style goal for women who smoke cigarettes? To be as sloppy in their smoking as the men. That's according to local authority on all possible topics John J. Snyder of 55 Snyder Avenue whose recent advice to the Sanitation Department that snow should be heaped in the middle of the streets so that it would melt and flow naturally into the drains is likely to be disregarded this winter. Mr. Snyder's new crusade is the reform female smoking habits, which, he says, presently show "a studied indifference which is nevertheless painfully obvious." He urges women smokers to instead follow the example of men and casually flick their ashes on the floor, and to converse casually as they smoke rather than "keeping up a constant chatter." The butt, he insists, should be held not in a studied and contrived manner, but casually, between the tips of the middle and ring fingers, with the burning end extending outward, and should be smoked down until the burning end just approaches the fingers.
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Turned-back thermostats, urban chicken coops, upcycled clothes -- it's like 1942 will never end.
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If I was Mrs. Booblebaum I'd have moved away years ago...
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WHAT SAPS WE WERE! Yeah, you could say that.
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And a Sunday News bonus bcause the public demanded it --
And for some more wholesome reading for the kiddies...
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