Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 157, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1934 — Page 11
NOV. 10, 1931
A Woman's Viewpoint ItV MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
wIT HAT would you do If you W vit-rr >ft an estate of SIOO 000.000? Such the legacy of Mrs. Percy RockfeUer, sole benefir tar/ of her late husband's will. The Idea to most of us to tremendously exciting Immediately visions of dreams fulfilled come rushing Into the mind, dreams of travel ovrr sunlit seas; of fairy freedom; of the possession of luxuries long desired. We easily ran fancy ourselves tasting all the pleasures and delights which riches offer man. Yet I am sure sustained refection would bring a finer wisdom To have the power such a sum bestows would be rather a frightening sensation, for there Is no denying the responsibility of wealth grows yearly more heavy. Thinking about it. then, in ail soberness, we may well ask ourselves ahy one man should have anv surh legacy to leave behind him in a country where 10.000.000 of his kind are without sustenance. without security, without hope. Is this where democracy finally has led us? Does American initiative and individualism point to such equality with pride? I am well aware how such fortunes were made. They were accumulated during an era of rapid expansion, of quick development such as the world has never before known, in a continent whose m' r r;ai g.fts were unbelievably opulent, so opulent, in fact, that an overwhelming desire for more and more and more money was bred in the minds of intelligently aggresive citizens. Now, then. If this old order which made possible such estates for the few a not disappearing.
HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Punle in Axillary 2 The bo/ crown . , _ . ■. . 11 rarticle prince, who re- —u AJ3 FI cenfly became .D CE. PjBL E..A D carol. Icing TQmMQA VjE DBD L wDU 15 Thick shrub His father AVmH'O’P'E [SMLi I M’OM|S 22 Kindled. King Alexan- SMS,Q;I_ |E 3|MAG ll|A l 24 He is the new der. wa, POT T*E ‘ A*S jHIIAMT ruler of . In Franca. £ BOiEiSIrBE LT■ EPi IjC 27 Dr >' ‘l3 Unit. D r 11 AiLKo PA'LHD eTeIIL 2! * Twitching. 11 To originate. ' Q7'A*L fflC A Q bHfTI 31 t ,aMPnPd 1C Card game. rv*wtr\ 5 E nBn AV’yMw E 32 Sesame 17 Away. 33 Pertaining to I‘<W. JftßfltlD T*Bms "" 1? Promise ~-c- np 35 To (i ° 7 * jo Devoured. 21 To distribute. 37 Landholders 21 Trifled. unit 61 His father’s j n Scotland. '25 Verbal. 4.5 Small child. oldest brother. 3s Period. 26 Iris rootstock. *' Curse Prince 41 At the present 2 Wine caslt N®l ,n wala renounced the time. 3o Passage. 5 Inlet throne 43 Fuel 32 Musical not# 52 Those who VERTICAL 46 Wild duck. 33 Company weave . , 47 To boast. 24 Epicurean 55 Flood container 45 Sharp tooth. logic. 56 To hurl 2 To deduc * 49 Poker stake. 37 To extol. against 3 Atrocious 51 Tree 39 Pertaining to 58 A larval stage. 4 Tiny vegetable. 53 Morindin aye. the nose. 59 To gasjv 5 To eject 54 Type standard. 40 Malicious 60 He was attend- 6 Playing card. 55 Vehicle burning. ing In 7 Half an em 57 Cry of sur--42 To handle. England, this 8 Blackbird. prise. 44 Structural year 9 To stitch 59 Italian river
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ThE#LeadepL / ■AiraJn 1
This Curious World Ferguson
r ~~ rs BELIEVED TO BE Y\l y \\ i\ ,iVu , 70. 000, ooo• l| jLj/ a\ ( from hippopotamus tusks tS moke valuable than THE IVORY FORMED IN ELEPHANT TUSKS/ aQAj IT* *5 000, 000 SQUARE MILES •/ op the szeoo, 000 . j •**£%£*** ••\ V EIAC2.TH Y WERE INVOLVED f IN THE WORLD WAR. _____ * '*** ** *** torMC< - "*■ **•
or the 12.600 000 square miles of the earth not directly involved In the World war. about 5,000,000 are in Antarctica, where there are no human inhabitant*. • • • NEXT—De moose ase their antlers tot shoreline snow?
It should be. There to no longer a place In any civilized social scheme for one individual who ha* *uch money power, while millions struggle hopelessly for enough to keep body and soul together. Mrs. Rockefeller to not 19 an enviable position. She to, instead, the hapless victim of a crushing weight of wealth. While men stand in breadlines, while boys and girls go vagabonding up and down the country and old women weep their lives away, it must not be a pleasant feeling to know you have 5100.000.000. NIGHTSESSI ON SARE OROERED BY BAKER Criminal Judge Also Set* Dates for Four Murder Trials. Night sessions in criminal court have been ordered by Criminal Judge Fr*>nk P. Baker. The night sessions, which will commence Nov. 19, are necessary, Judge Baker said, to clear up the court calendar, particularly those cases in which defendants now are being htld in the county Jail. Judge Baker also announced the trial dates for four murder cases. Robert Coffee, indicted for first and second degree murder for the shooting of Ollie Kimbrough last Feb. 4. will be tried Nov. 19. The trial of Claude Maudlin, charged with first second degree murder for the shooting of his wife, Mrs. Essie Maudlin. Feb. 15, will be held Dec. 3. WMlliam Hitchcock, indicted on murder charges for the shooting of Fred Heir. April 10. will be tried Dec. 10. Ernest Washington, fugitive for five years until his arrest in Washington last month, will be trird Dec. 17 for the murder of Julia M. Washington, June 1, 1929.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
HAACVETU 'Sianl WNT n' a HOSS 1 V L M W// m tl-IO J
FPF.rKT.FS AND HIS FRIENDS
V , ~ r , VI WHV JwELL.iP I WEVEB 'l f WELL .WELL/IF IT ISKJT ) > HUH < WHATS A KISS, MORE A WHAT yoo r ~ ___ . ) BIFF GOT MH A LIST OF J \SST IWTO A SAME, THE GUY WHO WANTED iO® LESS? I WISH I MAD A ) DO ? BUY YOURSELF f \ THE SIGNALS, AND I KNOW \ KEEP IT / PEOPLE WILL TO AMAZE THE WORLD Z X t NICKEL FDP EVEPY GIPL / PACKAGE QF JR f WOOD TO ANYONE, ABOUT \ EVERY PLAY BV HEAPT.' I ) A SECRET. AT ME FOR WHH HIS FOOTSAU_ j T'VE KISSED " S rtllM ? )VY PRACTICING FOOTBALL / MAY SET IWTO A GAME, / FRECKLES J PRACTICING/ I'LL ABILITY! THE GUY WHO \y oup . fjfL <s ’ 1 WT7H BIFP EVERY NIGHT f ( SOMETIME ~.YbU CAWT ) ? J SORT OF BE LIKE WAMTEO ID SHOW OFF, ) SELF ' i ijW^—^-7 I I’M KEEPIWG fT A ) TELL—AWD I WAKTT TD J bfl ° / DOW QUIXOTE „ )2. / if'lfftf W ' i
WASHINGTON TTTRBS II
ft f r / OM, FRITZV-WITZY. YOO HOO/ )IS THAT-AH-THEN /OH, YES, IMOEEDY-WEED^ I.OWER THE BRIDGV-WIDOV J U)AV YOU TALK IT'S MY WAY OP BEING HAVE ALL THE TIME? j CUTST. YOU SEE, IF I'M 0 I ' jp r-- TO INSPIRE MEW TO \.JC\ \ f &i/ DEEPS, I / v* > Ss r ' f MUSTN'T RELY ON MV S BEAUTY-WOOTIE ALONE, j IWUST (HSOELKTBiFV
ALLEY OOP
ALLEY UUB ___ • WEAW # BUT i'M V (WELL, OKAY IP. YOU THROUGH TAKIN IT'S BEST* CHANCES/WERE) / WHICH WAY WE B GONNA GIT ON y/ ( GOIN, NORTH,SOUTH, .u^
ROOTS ANT) HER RUDDIES
J\J\J X o Alii/ 111U1V J \ A—_ j ONE THINGS SURE - ILL. lOEVI . HOVOO //>- ® N } GMORN\N&. ( HAOE VOSE TH'OL* NOOOLE,? YOO ENAOY
TARZAN AND THE CITY OF GOLD
It/.,i. ...winmii w'™.. bottld* rwvM &*sicx9Sr3& N-101
Glancing back, Tarsan was not surprised at what he saw. A lion was sulking him; a lion wearing the harness of a hunting lion of the City of Gold. It was one of Xerstle’s lions; the same lion that had accompanied Pindes and Tarzan. Now the ape-man guessed the truth.
Shop in the "Buy-Way"—Downstairs at Ayres—Where You SAVE on Everything for Home and Fami1y!.,.,,,,..,.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
He knew now that the whole hunt had been arranged to kill HIM, and a grim light glinted in his eyes. It was no light of anger, but, there was disgust in it,and the shadowy suggestion of a savage smile. The lion, realizing that its quarry had discovered it, began to roar.
—By Ahern
OUT OUR WAY
kev— hev/ \ ~1 ~i there's another \f if utopia meases WHLTT D'V/b \ REASON! WHY A PLACE WHERE VOU'PE \ THEY CAN'T MAKE EVERYBODY IS OOiM 1 HERE? H NO UTOPIA OE HAPPY, THEN' SM SJj, nzu H|S EARTH THER CAN'T BE NO fk “ ALOAPER,MIND such PLACE .because [c \ PUI -Jv A ——r You-A GUV WHO SOME PEOPLF ARE OUT . A- 1 —J L- HAS NO BUSINESS \ ONLY HAPPY WHEN > WITH HIS NOSE THEY'RE MAKIN' V-e-r 0 \ |n THERE —BLAYMN' OTHER PEOPLE > 0 0 0 ) \ SOMEONE ELSE, yV UNHAPPY. S • .of \ CUZ HE GOT (T / —^ j .H-,vs/iV.Li'V'T& e lw THE NOSE WARMER ,
l ELECTROCUTED, I MAN ! TEE HEE.I'LL CALL BE WISHIE-) TA MEAN, TELL HER HIGHNESS • WASHIE HERE. SHE LL
—— r ( cj it goinTdTnny, aw powT~sldw~> J\ kJLL^pOWN POR A LONG TIMEA^ zsmt, toC 1 934 BJT.NEA SCBVtCt. INC. T W REG U. S. P*T. ‘'.*TT _/ n _ ’ic Ai
MONA \<b A VOONOEtt'. SHE CERTAINLY ( 1" AH HUH , I TELL | VtAV\--AN OL. E>OY, KVVOIWS ROW TO POT OOEtt A PNRTYI \ YOO .-SHE'S \ SUES PLENTY WEUEQ. UWEHJ eOCH A EENO ~, r CLENEtt .THAT J SMARTED. ENEN THAfri EO-R OETAVLS —ANO SHE \ TOO THINK SV*£ TABLES SOCH AW \NTEREST ? SHE ? SMART AS A Hl6 .TOO * \N J | SORE WH\P 1 k ~ * D* IT/l/rnM Dinrv
In the distance Pindes heard and smiled. He ordered the keepers ah*ad, saying: "We must not find Tarzan's remains too quickly; that might not look well.” Farther away. Xerstle and Gemnon also heard the roaring of the lion. "We had best join them,” said Gemnon.
—By Edgar Rice Burroughs
Xerstle, wishing to be sure the ape-man had met his end, demurred with excuses. "Not yet,” he said. "It may be a false trail. We will wait until we hear the hunters call.” But Gemnon was troubled. . . . Tarzan stood waiting. On came the man-hunting lion.
COMIO PAG*
—By Williams
—By Blossei
—By Crane
—By Hamlin
—By Martin
