Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 118, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1932 — Page 11
SEPT. 26, 1932.
iv R. G. MONTGOMERY
nr.GIN HF.RE TODAY BTAN BALL an agent for rattle interest*. face* A9PER UILO In hi* office. i. ,c W ot killing men sent to check hi* timbering actlvltie* at Three River*. Ball announce* he 1* making a peraonal check. Delo sav* he personally v- ii see that he doe* not make the oLeck. Leaving the office. Stan save* a girl from kidnapers. She proves to be DONA DELO. Asper's daughter. When Stan learn* her name, he tell* her he i* STANLEY BLACK and slips • wav. DUDLEY WINTERS, in love with Dona, agree* to go to Three Rivers and bring •Asper back. Dona goe* with him and at a little ranch place on the wav Dudley put* a plan of marriage to Dona, honing she will take this plan of getting Asoer Delo to return. She agree*, but hold* back when Stan Rail, on his wav to Three River*, steps out of the night and kisses her At Thrre River* thev meet SWEROrN. Asper * timber bo*s. and he sav* he is 1-cadv to kill Ball, that Ball shot a ranger Dona decides to ride in the hunt for Rail She catches a bad horse and has to trv to ride him to keep up her pride. Dona rides the roan Swergin tell* • her she; must not ride without a guard as BalTl* a killer and is at large She slip* iwsv and ride* toward Pass Creek, where she has been told not to go. Dona sees her father ambushed and thot bv a rider on a hlack horse NOW’ GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER ELEVEN WITH night coming on and a cold chill settling on the high coutry, she sat there helpless beside the form of her father. Big tears welled in tyer eyes and she felt her courage deserting her. Dona covered her face her hands and tears slid between her fingers. She was sure that her father could not live through the chill of a mouhtain night. He needed the attention of the camp doctor at once. “This is a hell of a mess!” A cold Voice broke the stillness. Dona looked up and saw Swergin bending over her. She leaped to her feet and could have thrown herself Into his arms in spite of his scowl, so glad was she to see him. Tears of joy choked her and she could not speak. Swergin examined Asper with rough hands. He grunted and straightened up. “Got to get him in at once! Ball is a rotten shot.” Swerkin had caught the roan and trailed him back to the scene of the ■hooting. “I’m so glad you came. You knew dad left for Pass creek canyon?” Dona’s words tumbled out. Swergin had gathered Asper up and was placing him across his saddle. He glared at Dona. “I knew you were both fools enough to come,” he snapped. “But you don’t do it again or you can stay out all night!” The trip to camp was a torture of anxiety for Dona. Now that they were rescued, she was fearful that i Swergin had come too late. f Their pace seemed little better than crawling. Darkness found >hem only half way to Three Rivers and they had to go even slower, with the horses taking their own head. k Finally the lights of the camp winked through .the black wall ahead and Dona spurred the roan to a gallop. The horse had become very docile after his fright. She wanted to get the doctor and have him ready as soon as her father arrived. Dudley was pacing up and down before the open fireplace In the big room at headquarters. When Dona entered he leaped toward her and gripped her shoulders. “Where under heaven have you been?” he fairly shouted. “Quick, the doctor! Dad’s been shot,” she panted. Dudley did not stop to ask questions, but dashed away while Dona arranged her father’s bed. Swergin carried Asper up the steps and into the room i The heavy burden seemed only a tfifle to the timber boss. The doc-
HORIZONTAL , 1 Skein of yarn. •5 Causes physical pain, to. 10 Long pole on a vessel. |4 Opposite of aweather. |ls to seize without right. iffi Potpourri. tIT Device for producing light is To turn aside. [l9 Inclination. £0 Mathematical test at Cambridge University. £2 The glassworf. (4 Trees yielding oil. £7 Smallage; common vegetable herb. 81 To constrict. f 4 Vats. 85 To damage slightly. 86 Aperture. 88 Fish. 89 With a bend; said of the
&ijEißi TiAiLpisi rroisrri |BjOjR|A I AjP ARJ [oppiß It IT|E~ Ml ME T E RjTTPTLIYI P I E SprNO I Lr )P|OjL A N DllCiA L c U ITT IA (a[C|P R|nMt I T L eMA I L [PloTstMf ate:sßsl at JaljJeJCapCdMst ere ‘ ILIEIS SENEMau R S AIR cat slidlq n a KAM A~ A T TIaTR ~ I dJqQ .ICON J_RAJT E Tjp|.j NIETwITI [l YREJSJ 5 EIEIDI
43 One who sells to the consumer. 47 Ape-like. 48 Paroxysm. 49 Entrance. 61 Ship’s lantern. 65 Drinks little by little. 68 Pope’s veil. 61 Strong current of air. 62 Ode. 63 At no time. 64 Opposite of odd.
arm. * 6 5 Spec lea of 12 Iniquity. 60 Guided. i 7"" 7™" sT"" 7"" e""" l£r"rPT?™ * * ~ >6 7 ie 19 25 zi •I?? i 26 srp p" J — = l w 1 49 bO ,■■■■■■■■—„ 55 56 57 59 ~ "" 6i -- 56 I I I 1 I I L_JL—J---JLiis
\
tor came bustling in with his black case and took charge. He halted long enough in his examination to look at Dona and then to order Dudley, who stood with an arm around her, to take her from the room. “Give her whisky or black coffee and have her Wbre when I can call her. She should lie down.” The doctor turned again to his patient and did not give the pair another glance. a a a DUDLEY forced Dona to come with him. He took her to her
THEY.TILL ME'iJ-J'
‘Coming of a New Party’ Occasionally someone writes a book on politics which displays a knowledge of the fundamentals of our social and economic fabric, as well as more than a cursory acquaintance with the tactics employed in getting at the public trough. Such is “The Coming of a New Party,” by Professor Paul H. Douglas, regarding which you will hear a great deal in the next few years. Because it is concerned with politics and is issued at a time when the established parties are engaged in one of their quadrennial farces conducted for the purpose of fooling the voters, Prof. Douglas’ book should be read by every voter—which of course won’t be done. Douglas doesn’t expect his proposal for anew party to be launched in this campaign, but he does suggest, with a touch of satire, that the people may not be entirely satisfied with what they will get out of the November election, no matter which label wins. * Putting his finger upon what is perhaps America’s greatest weakness—the myth or tradition that our social and political organizations exist primarily to give every American citizen an opportunity to become a millionaire—Professor Douglas sets out in the first part of his book that it is by laws of chance, not by laws of democracy, that men become millionaires. a a u Quoting the federal trade commission’s report, he points out that 2 per cent of our population owns approximately 70 per cent of our wealth; he then reasons that if the other 98 per cent of us continue our struggle for the 30 per cent left, 95 per cent of us will come out with nothing. “The vast majority of the working class must face the fact that not only will they continue to be wage earners throughout their lives, but their children can in the main look forward to no better fortune,” Douglas w'rites. “Shut up as we are within a wage system, we can not expect them to be forever deluded by the day-dreams of glittering possibilities spread before them through the popular magazines and the movies. “They sometimes will see the things as they really are and will realize that their hopes are bound up not so much with the faint possibilities of individual economic success as with the improvement of the conditions of the class to which they belong.” TJouglas asserts that although we Americans shrink from the idea of classes, yet the population so is divided.” As long as there exists
Answer .to Previous Puzzle
pier. 66 Sows. 67 Chair. VERTICAL ITo stop. 2 Wing-like, 3 Half. 4 Condiment. 6 Large bay in Canada. 6 To consume. 7 Wagon track. 8 To migrate. 9 Lively. 10 Bay in Ala-, bama, U. S. A. 11 Beer.
room and produced a flask from his pocket. Dona was able to swallow only a gulp of the liquor, but its fire soothed her Dudley insisted that she should lie down, and sat beside her holding her hand. “Honey, I love you,” he whispered. Dona, stirred and looked at him dry-eyed. "I am taking you out of here just as soon as your dad can be moved!” he announced determinedly. A dark light flashed in the girl’s blue eyes. “I'm not going until that man Ball is brought in.” Her lips
’ organized industry, some will be employers arid others employes and so there will be two classes,” he says. * n m Then Douglas also summarizes the American philosophy of life in the idea that “money is the supreme god, since it alone can give protection against the dangers of life! provide leisure and beauty, obtain power and great social esteem.” Men, he argues, naturally are rivals, because of this fight for money, as a man’s first and almost exclusive duty is to himself and to his family. “We Americans might seem to be held fast In a tragic vise from which we are powerless to extricate ourselves, says Douglas; but, in fact, this is not so. When the great majority comes to realize clearly two fundamental facts about our social life, then the present “dog eat dog” attitude rapidly will be changed. / “These two unappreciated truths are: That in the very nature of the present individualistic struggle, only a few can succeed, while the vast majority must lose the prizes for which they strive, and that by cooperation those individually weak can make themselves collectively strong. Thus they can obtain benefits by common, action impossible under the largely self-defeating methods of our present way of life.”
2TSODK A DA/ BY BRUCE CATTON BACK in the mountains of Kentucky there are nurses who ride on horseback. They are members of the Frontier Nursing Service, and their job is to give medical attention to the “mountain whites” of the region—the folk who ordinarily live their lives through without ever seeing a doctor or a nurse, who have only ignorant native midwives attend them at childbirth and only the home-made concoctions and superstitious ideas of local herb-doctors to rely on when sickness comes. Most of us, very likely, never heard of these nurses. But they are doing a great work, and their way of doing it has that intangible thing called romance iij it; and “Nurses on Horseback,”, by Ernest Poole,” which is a book telling all about them, is an inspiring and fascinating story. In this book you not only meet the capable and courageous women who are saving the lives of mountain men, women and children; you meet the mountain folks themselves, and you come to agree with the nurses’ estimate of them—that they are basically as fine people as America contains, and that redeeming them from the slough in which poverty, ignorance and isolation have dropped them is one of the country’s most important jobs. You'll find “Nurses on Horseback” very much worth reading. Published by the Macmillan Company, it retails for $1.75.
13 Small child. 21 Kimono sash. 23 Sheltered place. 25 Embryo bird. 26 Gunlock catches. 28 Bad. 29 Counsel. 30 River flowing through Belgium. 31 Wine vessels. 32 Monkey. 33 Neat. 37 Energy. 40 Malaria. 41 Vicious. 42 Pungent vegetable* 44 Candles. 45 Tree. 46 Likenesses. 60 Largest land. plant. 52 To be furious. 63 True olive shrub. 64 Delivered. 55 Mineral spring. 56 Electrified particle. 57 To fondl* 59 Farewell!
yriCKtP.5
czumQ • h-mvnuja-A Tittle lot, m printing two words, turned the letters all around and switched two letters in each word. See if you can straighten the letters out and then put them in their right order, to complete the two words. l - II
START IST CAM 6 Z* t>3 *0 JIM-IS 2 ' 4 8 JOB-A 8/6 8 PAN -7 /4 4 8 Tbe above table shows the number of marbles each boy started with*and bow they stood at the end of each game. In the end Jim was loser five marbles, Joe was winner four and Dan was wrrmer one. ■2.1,
TARZAN AND THE ANT MEN
Answer for Saturday
cLtL** IMI W Mt.' R ..BnrTmiili. In. : Chill Ibutcd by United Feature Syndicate. Inc.
Very proud, the Son of The First Woman explained the great change that had come upon the Alali since the ape-man had given the men weapons. No longer were the she* allpowerful. Now the former down-trodden males each had & woman cooking for him.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
were tight and her little chin came up. ‘‘What good can you do?” Dudley insisted gently. “He took a mean advantage of dad. I saw it!” Dona fastened her eye son the door. Dudley did not argue. There would be plenty of time for that after they received news about the wounded man. The little clock on the dresser ticked away but Dona did not take her eyes from the door and the firm line of her mouth did not soften. At length she spoke. “If—if Dad doesn’t—make it, I want to have a J?and in running Ball down. I could shoot him myself!” The door opened softly and the doctor thrust his head inside. When he saw the pair he entered. Dona leaped up and ran to meet him.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
BE OFF, DI2AT VOU ALL / MY -RETURN TO THE HOME t . ' NEIGHBORHOOD \G ALWAYS I GREETED WITH A FANFARE Vj-, V ‘S—O. . S, OP BA'RKS /—OFF WITH THE \ , PACK OF YOU .BEFORE I SPRAT - I v,-—vou with clouts/-$ £AT/ F ?rrT L K Tm going To * |T~ v As GET MYSELF AN OFFICE AUTHORITY IN THE "DOG y - ' g? . y em* by n*a srwvict. me. 7-26 y
AND HIS FRIENDS
FRECKLES
AFTER \ ' r ( HOPE- 1 AH > f /.W, VtoU'RE JA TO GET \ AHVHOW? vWr < *?<, / IMSIDE HUHCH TWAT J I UDDISJ* ME, | 7 J j* SWA £S' De IF ME about) UaVa baS: U S *** low* erry, (^pytL^Hoc^o^ out
WASHINGTON TUBBS II
T/WXkSH MP EASY ARE ?OM®K>ONt>ET> TO FIND BULLLOCKEbN C TRIM BIASTtD SOJERS PERM A WIN A CA?!N_>Hp THOROUGHLY T\EP. MIGH RUIHT OLP SLUG >l’ ME. /Tee r *APS, TrtNS WOT WE WA.S. WE fFjt' ( m?give VshipSSre TC? ' es T 0 UCK TH ’ r —' /ms V i KrL A Uf I .,o WP KA6OOOLS O’ TRIM WITH /
SALESMAN SAM
I WAS SMWRT To pwstsr l'\JE SCOfteD CNt POfUT" AL-} Cntl, HOWIC-, OiHaTS Tl4€. \ ’coOßse tfoT! THIS IS A CtH’ OMe. -/O0 SOLO ME UJPS A OEMUVIMfc AfiTl©Lj&ow A FEW OPefs FER Ready 1 SOLO ThT POOR SAP IDEA? THAT AfN'T TH' / BRAND N£U) GN6.-I JUST ONCE USED BY <5-€M. — AN' ( OoT & 100 FOR oat practice., before, a oum tvy*Ts older THan o-uu 'You’Re. suPPoseo ) eouoMT IT fer&lO- - .IT from THECutNeR of This antique. shop' 1 w.c m i.n-M, M'uc.n- „uteiuouft
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
A Ls Wj EESOaOUfr ■ VOotVLE. Tt3\g>E- V/6fo OK> \T& PT . WAV TO ATTACW \ \tt<->TAvStW THE. E>\_N CYk J4JRM WS.WRKS TOR THE OFFEND OF TWE.VR 1, a Icrnw MIUAGE '. THE ,}V>K>\_E w ™ . “ TO ....
IsS AJaSkil
The next day the six fugitivies started across the plain toward Trohanadalmakus. In that city Tarzan resolved to remain until he regained his normal sise*. Then he would make a determined effort to cut his way through the thorn forest to his own country.
"He is asleep and he. has a chance. Swergin got him in just in time. Bad rap on the head to go with the biAet wound.” He looked at Donna critically and seemed to be deciding something. “He will make it!” the girl whispered fiercely. “You can nurse him?” the doctor put the question briefly. Dona nodded eagerly. “No hysteria. No foolishness. Just do as I tell you.” The doctor wak not accustomed to wealthy patients and gave his orders bluntly. Dona listened carefully to all he said. She was eager to go at once to her father’s side, but the docltor shook his head. “This is my job tonight. You are to sleep. If I need you, I’ll call you.” He gave a questioning look at Dudley as he turned to leave.
“I’ll stay up with him tonight,” Dudley offered. Dona squeezed Dudley’s hand and let him go without a word. a a m 'T'HE next morning Asper regained consciousness while Dona was at his side. He grinned as he recognized her and spoke weakly. That cowpuncher came near getting the old man.’’ Dona patted his hand. “No talking yet. Dad. You’ll be fit as ever in a few days, the doctor says.” “You can’t kill a lumberjack with one bullet,” Asper grinned. “Who brought me in?” “Swergin,” Dona told him with a smile. “I guess you were right about him. He is a good man anc! we ow*e him a lot.” She did not tell him of her part in the affair. Asper smiled and closed his eyes.
—By Ahern OUT OUR WAY '
WASH <VHD EASY RME LEFTt (jfl &CT f BUT JUST WMT! I’LL SETTLE THEIR.' JY GOLLY, SKIPPER, W WNsY THEY SURE ' S TENDER <IH / THE SMARTEST TRICK l EVER ) RUINT MY PLNMS \V ”*! TL, V SEEN. THEY PIPNT SUSPECT J O' TURNIN' j\OUTSM*RT BU LL°U A THING, WER TVT MUNITIONS I
i !
Two days* later the fugitives reached the domes of Trohanadalmakus. They were conducted at ones to the throne room of Adendrohahkis. There that mighty ruler took his son in his arms and wept, so great was his' happiness at having Komodoflorensal returned.
In a few minutes he was asleep and Dona tip-toed to the open window. She could see Dudley down at the corrals. He was riding her roan horse and she could tell by the lift of his shoulders that he was proud of his success. Dona slipped out on the porch where she was still within a few steps of the sick room. Putting her fingers to her lips in the manner of her pig-tail days she whistled. Dudley looked up and saw her. He turned and sent the roan galloping up the hill. “Where did you get my horse?” she greeted him. “Just borrowed him.” A look of priae came into Dudley's face. ”1 had to show this brute I could ride him.” “Didn’t he object?” Dona smiled. Dudley answered with a frank
, fl KNOW WHY YOU ASKEdN ME TO CALL HIM INTO THE j kitchen , young i \ f ” Mi# TRICKY STUFF,HUH? WELL 1 jjk | * KfWA VHE GOT THAT EASY CHAIR \ ta&l HMak first and he can keep it'CAUSE YOU’RE COMIN' INTO / 'HU |\\\ A T 1 THE KITCHEN VOUPSELF —/ pip ME WITH^^X
j Elhe w••••okTtwey ? j COHE.,BT THE WMX2E.De> THEY THE. 9A\JAAOE - im-~il TIITI Til o ? l oiMbrtMFVK.c4 JX
grin. "That bird, Malloy, down at the corral says you took all th light out of him.” Dona leaned down over the porch rail and patted the roan. “Don’t ever try to shoot while you*re riding him,” she warned. “I, may do just that.” There was a determined look in Dudley’s eyes. “I’ve been practicing with a rifle.” “You're not going out, Dudley. I need you too badly.” “How is your father?” Dudley asked evasively. “Not worse?” mam DONA shook her head. ‘Dad is going to be fine. He's already swearing vengeance and that's a good sign.’’ (To Be Continued)
—By Edgar Rice Burroughs
Adendrohahkis called Tarzan to the-foot of his throne. There, before the entire court, he made him a aertol, or prince, begging him to stay among them always. To Janzara, Zoanthrohago, and Oratharc he gave their liberty and permission to remain in the city.
PAGE 11
—By Williams
—By Blosser
—By Crane
—By Small
—By Martin
