Bloomington Daily Telephone, Volume 56, Number 79, Bloomington, Monroe County, 20 December 1932 — Page 6

'

1

PAGE SIX . "-

THE BLOOMINGTON DAILY TELEPHONE, R LOOMIN G TON , INDIANA, (PHONE 3000)

TUESDAY,-DECL

V-

10

NTOCOVERUP

TOOTS AND CASPER

By 1

The program of the National ; compensation the r average "taxpay- j

Efcoriomy League .. is merely.; a .! er. .wtUvPeiorced, to. assume. a..Dur-smoke-screen designed to cover up J den that rightfully belongs to the c& -movement that will relieve big federal government." , business from taxation and; trans- Past .Commander- Harmon pointier 'this burden to the small tax- ed out that tinder the present sys- ' payer of every community; This. tern the!, .ayerage taxpayer, conis -ijhe view of Past: Ctoniniander : tributes little,, or nothing,, toward Johr. A! Hairibn or Laurens B. veteran relief;. He pointed out that Strain Post 604.' Veterans of For- the governments veteran expendi- - eign Wars of. the: TJ. Si; in a, warn- i tures are made1 possible with funds : ing: to. citizens of this community vi received from income toxes and who have been invited to support : ttat approximately four-fifths "of the National Economy League in : all the income tax received by the

1 its flmnai?n for the reduction of government is paid .by approxi-

fede:al expenditures.

""If the ,. National , - Economy League would .eyen pretend to: .ac-

comolish the nurpofies or us gen:

mately 40K)0 wealthy individuals.

, "The National - Economy League has the support of these persons ixrH.-i avp aWp tn afford lartre in-

A BOOK ABOUT YOUR EXPERIENCES

AS THE WORLD'S GREATEST DETECTIVE

WOULD BE INTERESTING READING.

MR. DICKSON! W5 AMAZINu HOW

MANY FAMOUS CASES YOU'VE WORKED

ON! AND BY THE WAY" DID YOU KNOW

THAT MRS. MORTIMER CLAMBYOT

A DIVORCE?

YE 5, 1 HEARD THATCASPEW I DON'T BLAME HER AMD YET I FEEL SORRY

FOR CLAMBY!

7a

I WONDER WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO HiM? HE ISN'T

HALF AS BAD AS HE'S PAINTED IF I KNEW WHERE HE IS I'D LIKE

TO SAY HELLO

TO HIM.

LIKE HIMTOO,

CASPER, BUT I HAVEN'T

HEARD OF HIM FOR A LONGTIME! HE RETURNED ALL OF THE MONEY THAT HE ABSCONDED WITH, YOU KNOW, AND ALL CHARGES AGAINST

HIM WERE LATER DISMISSED J

1932. Kin 5 Futures Syndicate, The"! Great Britain rigliK " rcsVfvcid ;: j;

CASPER! LOOK AT THE CHRISTMAS CARD THAT OUST CAME FOR US! f

IT'S from CLAWSY! THERE'S NO ADDRESS ON IT, BUT. , n WAS MAILED FROM THIS CITY! I CAN TELL THAT BY

THE POST-MARK!

THAT'S ODD.

TOOTS! WE WERE

OUST TALKIN6 ABOUT HIM! I WISH HE'D . . CALL UP AND LET ME KNOW WHERE HE 15!

-A

m

YOU WON'T HEAR FROM HIM.CASPER! HE HAS TOO MUCH PRIDE TO ? LET ANY OF THE OflCROWD SEE HIM 1 WHILE HE'5 DOWN-

- AND OUT 1

UP MAV RE DOWN.,

THEY'LL NEVER COU , HIM OUT, M0055! HE VW

RUT WHEN HE

EVERY PENNY OF THE MONEY HE SWINDLED ME OUT OF COULDN T. HELP BUT WISH WAD MORE ENEMIES

11

vu i;r-: oVki,-. nam tax -oavments" Past. Com-

erai program, its munvw wuumy . , deserving of the support of every : mander Harmon emphasized "and SSr5 Past , they are the onesho are advocat-

.Ppmmander :Harmon ; , However, the National Economy . League is functioning in only one direction. Its campaign, is being directed exclusively at the veteran; ith a total disregard for the vast : Jncwases- in expenditures in other branches of our v federal government.. r-.u.-To the businessman who i3 asked to . support ; the National: Economy JLeague we urge him to remember that , compensation and ipenion awards to. .veterans bring ' new purchasing power, into : every .wcommuinty- - Thus,?, ther- disabled "vetei-an is. made a prospective consumer and customers "Deprived of tite help from the federal government, the disabled , .yeteran in need will become a burden to the.communitv- The aver- . age business : man will be. forced to . increase his .contribution, to loi cal- charitable institutions to help

care for. those veterans who are in

inff- the reduction in veteran expen

ditures, in order, to protect their own pocketbdoks' V;-: JMWNEI TUBE AND ALL COLUMBUfi O., Dec. 20...Tr-Sam Stif nerrt age, Jour, swalloved . the cap of a toothpaste tube and it lodged 'in one: of his lungs. Bushed to University ;j hospital the; cap was removed by means of a bronchSCOpe. ';- -- i . NO TAX FOR SCHOOJtl TOWANDA,;.IH.. 3ec. 20.-tt:INS this city recently built a new grade and high -tJchpol with : ho interest in taxes, r The project was; paid for : out of ::funds in . the . city treasury..

TILLIE THE TOILER

BOSTON; Dfec- 20. (INS) "Mike," a sea. lion, Us tne only living specimen of the original group; of -mamals arid fish which were

placed in , the South Boston Aquar-

disbess. takmg away from the j mm when it ppenea twency-iour. disabled veterans his pension or ! years ago,

T6day

Cross

Word

Puzzle

By EUGENE SHEFF1

ii li 1 2 Is Lh $ WAyyfyAb y Is H I li 2TpW2? p

WAIT FOfe

- : L

DOM'T BE" H-uy

AMD VsiE CAWT

mac shoujs uf ,

IT

OlCAy. VAiE'i-u VAAVT Fo& Mac 1 IF yOU FeCU THAT WAV ABOUT

HIM - DGM'T "STAETr

CT so HAo TO Put J I "HIS. RA2Ty OVSS g Pe-jruics Syndic rir.Cttai' "

look. hei-e.'sI T7 FhT V MAC MOVAl I -OlJe

LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY

fti OUT "TO FMpi "; I v .: v Ji bdl MAC AMO; BttCT V.- HASM'T C0KB J

SEE. ZERO. AIMT lTGP?AMDTO SEE

all that mice smow paluim' roe CHBISTMA5 IT MAKES- EVERY-. TMlWG LOOK 5WELL AM PK:ETTy-

JTUST LIKE A FF?oenVCHRl5TAAS

CARD jp

c

IIMftrf jil'l'ILiliili1

kv. JJrr-n7T:!..Yj a cr-?nn card

VCU KMOW, F0UI2TM OF cTULV WAS

TD.WAVE FIREWORKS AM' TWAKJK5-

GlVIMG DAY MAS) TO HAVE-TUfcKE,

--AM' CMEterAS DOWT 5EEM WIGHT

UWLE5S TWESE'5:L0TSA MICE. FAT

SNOWFLAKES FALUH' DOWN

1932. King Feature; Syndicate, Inc., Qttit Britain riglits rcser v &

J . m- v ii ' v I

I 1T " II

r WHAT6 THAT yOU 5AV??VDU'f2E S

WATIM' FOP2.6AK1TA CLAU5??? 5UE,5AWTA WOMT BE WEKE. UMTlL CMRi5TMA5HE HA6NT

EVEM STAerfeD TO.H1TCW

UP HIS R. E1MD EEES !f

iV- C ira t TiTT - - T-

EMPLOYEES

ENTRAlSiei:

0 "0

" r U: w

RvMeCluari

.i.l nil Miifc -

WAmNS Ft)R-THE REAL: '? ; i 5AM1TA CLAUS -UMClE lTERRV '5 - J : : H 5l j5 SAKHA eLAUS iKf THE f-C I :;

POPEYE

HOR120N1 M 40periye8

lairita or 4Z-lU$S

actions r 6 a srunc thins ' (colloq.) ;. ripe 14 because 15 article about

the nck ?

back; ' (as a river)

holiiday

49 Saturdav (abbr.) 50rHntinel 62 animal 64-rtonle.

7 printer's

measnre

18--doctrin 20 a lift 21prpnonn ;V.

v : amphibian ?--infaBt $ man's . ? - r . nickname:

S6-ebb 28 highest . adult male voice Col.)

SO passed-. afopjr;.Z2 raise v S3 guides S5 send forth 87 concjb rv

C9 sgea

VERTICAL: 1 fold io - strips " 2 instrnctiofi 3 each (abbr.) 4 part of a : circle - 6 haughty ; person 6 vehicle : .7 possessive pronoun 8 letter in ... f Greek u

Herewith is the solution to Sat urday's Puzzle :ym ::.

lit !VORE 1:

ILi M I IUK. f 1 ILKM I.IK

l : f' iz

vim Mil

AtPAWE

NT

alphabet -9 professions . of faith r 10 man's name 12 a slit . 13 subdue 16 plunder 19a master in any art 21 hastened 23 small. valleys 25 wanders 27 pastry ' 29born - . . 31 sleepy; 33 more ' pathetic . 34 a thin strip of wood - 36 tormentor 37 p a ri of lody 89 attracted 41 tiny';-;., 43 a pointed weapon 44 worry': : 47 letter ;. Greekalphabet. 4& a cutting instrument 51 "Northeast (abbr.) 53 note of . .. . scale:

imO MRS, 80WLQ ABOOtJ

5WEETON.MISS

MOW - $Hc-IN.

THERE NOW

FIT5

1

;

r jf il Great UrlUiin rights r5ervcdv Q 'j i "r ,,103 j,"5 "calurcs Syndicale, lncn ) )

l SA0-U)HO)OH,VDU IS THAT t I HER? UJHV .(5AV0- SHE Wto Vllliy

n i

VS. SHE'S THE. WH&S

RtAQW HER r

I'M -GOING

TO ASK THE

KING -POOH -

I OOtA'T

you

LsuJeeiy.

YOUR 6 DINAH MOW

VOUR. .rTTuTaAV'

ILL 5&Y 5H& IS!.1

HOT ,DQ61U

it

see - OiOcA'T Teuu vou? soREvt uove omuv VOU - YOU'RE THE IiiM:PTP'T i'nnrlF WDMAM

txTWKT EVER V.WEO

1 60ESS I WAS tHWWt H,

too Hfv&Ty y . y

GOOD-

eve,

J

1 1

BLONDIE

Byhicimi

Cleaners And Tailors

We consider a satisfied customer our Vie are members of BIRMA ' io8 sotrrtf c&tiMGfi avb. ? phone 2522

ibO NMUES .FROM HER

i . TO START. UPH ...Awew .. . UKE ALU R13 DISAPPOINTED im uoye, HER TROUSHTS -. TURN4 TO r tvpeSnwtin AMD .... 6HORCTMAHD

1932 King Twrurcs Sndicate, Inr...

: jSBIll (in TVPEWRJTiMG AMD HPFOHA? v MOaEjg

" "CI

U BOTH COURSES-. ARE VRvC aOOD 4

umycTO 'TUP TPVA-MOKTmS COURSE )

TAKE TWAT OlA.U BE

PERFECT 1M TVPEWRTTlMCii

AMD SWRTHAHO WHHM

NOU LEAVE OV1R

P1eTTER J

TEN A COURSE f

:iii--xs.... t

j , ,; I ( HOME RL.UKJE MVSEUf . I I plH - -' : ''"' :t 1 , HAS "TO BE AM EXPEKtJ

. ufc

YOUNG BUFFALO BILL

ByO'Neil

OH

3

INDIANAPOLIS, .Dec. 20.:r(UP) j Definite beliefs about the state! public service commission and the t highway department are heltl by I

Anderson W. KetchumrGreensburg

newly elected president pro tern of the state senate.

In., the... 1927- session of the legislu-j

ture... his first term in the senate,

he was , among the , leaders, of a movement seeking repeal of the public service commission law. Abolition . of tlie commission was

their objective but they lost.

Since attacks on the utility commission were a part of the Democratic state campaign, they are expected to be started again when te assembly convenes Jan. 5. Thus, Ketchum may again be a leading fob o'f the commission's ppeiation. In the 193i assembly, he was lined up with those investigating the state highway department and commission. If a change in the highway department's operations becomes a major issue in the 1933 assembly, Ketchum undoubtedly will be in the midst of the skirmishes. He favors modification of liquor laws but will hot commit himself

- Ti " -"rr rpt f 'O'T'rCE eRAT": MJ TrO'i THAT ft

r.-prr: l mtt Kv feT MEAN

, - wpi ,ri 1 i-1 vh ?

&v TW . - -J ! ,V-

OH1 TVCfeE: OHVtLfe ARE Pvrrri st3 A ftQPH -VB-Ou'i"

Pi CCMVNC) Trb WATT U

TO UTTHaR,

-I

19J5 t V-.dln. lYatuit eynd;, InoT

W. .mi i-.

further until ho knows provisions of the modification proposal under discussion.

Ketchum was elected president pro tern of the senate at the Demo-j cratic legislative caucus here three

weeks before tho assembly will convene. The post also wi'i make him majority floor leader. He was born in Decatur. A world war veteran, he now is in the real estate business in Green sburg. before becoming a senator, he way deputy clerk in the supreme and appellate courts four years.

Gordon Shoulcy, east 1st street, and Paul Underwood, south Euclid avenue, were in Nsedmore Friday to referee a basketball game between the high schools of Needmore and Valor.ia.

The JSdueational Review section of the December 3 issue of School and Society, national weekly for educators, devotes much space to a review by Dr. William McAndrew, former superintendent of the Chicago school system, on the new volume, "Economy and Technique of Learning1 by Dr. W. F. Book, head of the psychology department at Indiana university. Other reviews are carried in the New York Sun, in the quarterly

1 journal of the Rhode Island Instii tute of Instruction, in the Loyola : Educational Digest, in the Pennsyl- ! vania School Journal, in the New

York State Educational Journal, Indianapolis star, and other publications. J. Carlpton Bell, editor of the Journal of implied Psychology and head of the. . ehool of education of City Colleg : Wow York, in his review carrieu in the New York Sun says: "This is the long-awaited systematic treatise on the learning process for which Prof. Book's friends have, been looking since he published his brilliant monograph on 'The Psychology of skill, with Particular Reference to Its Acquisition in Tvr'-tting." "Prof. BctTTs late work would jar the complacency of many a high school and college teacher whom

BlttKN BY DQG

the Lord or some other power has j soring. -a "wear NyooI" movement on chosen to care for our young," writ- ; the campus;' as; $i means of aiding es Dr. Andrews in School and -j one of thestat'S: leading intius-

Society. . . . So, come on into mas.

one of the best written scieiunic works you will meet in many a. day.; It. is important; it is modern, it is authoritative; it will not confuse you by contracted theories it is bused on the careful study of the ways in which the best students do their work. "Quite properly,'1 writes the reviewer, "Prof. Book" dedicates, this volume to his former teacher, Indi ana President Bryan, father of investigations of learning .

WOOLEN COLLEGIANS LARAMIE. Wyoming, Pee. 20. (INS) Agricultural students qX the University of Wyoming are, spun-

Ralph Brown, a newsboy living at 522 west 4th -street, was bitten on the leg by a dog belonging to U Merle Wright, 1206 north Lincoln street, Saturday afternoon; Sanitary Officer Frank Robertson ordered the dog kept under observa- v ticn ten days to determine if it is suffering from rabies. .... Mr. and Mrs.; Henry SpHtgerber. north College avenue aro planning' to spend Christmas with the laUars

sister, Mrs. Heber Meonaughand

Miy Memiauf a of. .Salm.. -. ; ..

""""r : V-v.;-,-: Jh-" .r.

A

St"