Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 219, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1935 — Page 17
JAN. 22, 1935
A Womans Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
THE beauty columns in the newspapers are like the Ten Commandments. You know you should, but you feel perfectly certain you never will, obey them all. Keeping young and beautiful is a discouraging business. There is so much to be done and somehow you feel you're doomed to failure in the end. Why, only to keep yourself in your present condition you have tc be another Alice in Wonderland running as fast as ever you can Just to stay where you are. But all this is really nothing compared to the discouragement which will be yours once you are determined to obtain social charm and practice excellent manners. In my case, now, everything I’m really {pnd of doing is taboo. I’ve consulted all the authorities and find one must never sprawl—and how I love it!; never cross the legs below the knees; never rock violently, even though one is fortunate enough to discover that rare treat, a rocking chair; and never put the elbows on the dinner table. Also, on no condition must you fiddle with the upholstery or twist your handkerchief. When they are not in use, keep the hands folded gracefully in the lap. Life is too short to remember all these rules and much too interesting to be bothered with observing them. Doubts, too, are likely to assail us about their authenticity. Rumors have reached m.ddle-class ears of late that a good many things go on among the elite which Mrs. Emily Post would not approve. Do you suppose the social arbiters make rules for hoi polloi which they themselves never keep? Nothing is more likely, for the rich and famous
This Curious World Ferguson
:? ’ doves , HAVE NO <• /V-X GAUUS/ ' THE ANCIENTS __ y eEUEVED THE - J ’ if I <3ALL TO BE THE JBttY’ ' SEAT OF BITTERNESS AND BAD ■ belief led to '" THE SELECTION OF THE DOVE £¥ AS THE - J/eJE&3B£€H OP ire/ I VX/ CO M PLETELV EVER.V , = == =2XS^==i ===!i THREE TO FIVE YEARS, mr BtJT THE process ,s © 1935 BY NCASERVICE. IML* f== * —p. CITV NEWSPAPER fl LONGER THAN the AVERAGE 300-PAGE K EXCLUSIVE OF ADS. '•* & THE evergreen tree, although a cheerful object in winter, is a dulllookmg specimen, when compared with that of the summertime. The chlorophyl granules are withdrawn from the leaf surfaces, leaving the leaves a dull reddish brown color. * * • NEXT —What state once had greater waterfalls than Niagara?
HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 17 Skewer. 1 Market. ~ Lacking head *.12 Who Is the -iY.LHUP; | .ffLNjUMj NL- hair. actress in the 1 Wj l ' 'i 1 I* l 1 ‘PT '' 1 20 Mixture of picture? AjGl I {LIE IB lEi metals. :14 Balance. RjI,A,L.S VtUlini NSE'T 21 To eat 1 15 Work of skill. THHBEI SHO sparingly. 16 Crawling S.C;A| L iC~ HENUHIN IT!A|LiO|N)l T !A|LiO|N) 22 Penitent. animaL HALIAC EiVi I iLd 23 Toward sea. 17 Father. fCRA; V E yl 24 Poets. 18 Southeast. L E I 25 Elevates. 19 Wagers. KD EiA'LTSiBBiEI 26 Looks after. 20 Part of a x^^^tMTD'NBOSaL'S 27 Wall recess, circle. . ) F/.Nilc ssmr BUM WHIM 24 Courageous. 3S Deadly pale. VERTICAL 31 ot 25 Consumed. 39 Sixth note* 1 Female horse. IUU s * 26 Hawaiian 40 Thrashes. 2To perform. 22 Bone, rootstock. 42 Dandy. 3 R o ad. 34 Person. 28 House canarv. 43 Light brown. 4 Turrets. 36 Heaven-sent 20 She appeared 44 To coat with 5 oilas. foodon the screen a thin alloy. 6 Tree. 37 To caution, in Lehar’s 45 Game played 7 Paid publicity. 33 Large room. •• ” on horses. g Calendar 30 Secular. 33 Musical note. 46 PrincipaL period. 41 Rumanian 34 Curved 47 She is a 9 Toward. coins, laterally. good 10 Note in scale. 42 To accomplish. 35 Frozen (pi.). 11 Corpse. 43 Japanese fish desserts. 4S She is a native 12 A bulk. 45 Postscript 17 Joins closely. of . 13 Short letter. 46 Mister. rrrr -5 m Fi—^ rr ——\Vs- ic 1 31 | "ifr —rsr — t#i # I TI ter ir ~ i m ss** *■ ZRIZZZZI.*
generally do as they please. Regulations about good manners are made, like a lot of other laws, for the folk who are born without money. SPECIALIZATION RAPPED BY I. U. PROFESSOR Alumni Group Hears Address by Faculty Member. ‘•The psychological aftermath of the depression has descended upon countless men and women of middle or mature years with a severity that is not only extreme, but merciless,” Prof. George S. Snoddy, Indiana University faculty member, declared yesterday before the Indiana University Club. Much of the sorrow that has followed the depression has been due to the extreme tendency toward specialization, Prof. Snoddy said. He pointed out that many persons concentrating on a single profession, found themselves with nothing to do when the depression deprived them of a chance to work at their particular specialty. HURT IN CAR COLLISION City Man Is Thrown Through Windshield, Injured. Clifford Woodson, 37, of 140 N. Miley-av, suffered severe cuts early today when the automobile which he was driving crashed into the rear of a taxicab parked on N. Pennsyl-vania-st near the Y. W. C. A. Mr. Woodson, who was thrown through the windshield, was sent to City Hospital.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
Iff VOU SEE,SUH—.VCUW HORSE ““W? JU M "BEING ABOUT EI6KT YEARS OLD, i|ff ' f fAZb NS TW&T WE IS ATT TWE iff’ WELL, COLON < ' TWILI6HT OF- W\S *R*CINCb % CAREER IN OTHER WOTOS,HE G°iN<o 4 y IS PEAK~I WONT * SAY ME CANT WIN A ‘—v. j < V c \ ■ ) 'BUT.SUH . HE'D BE SOMETHING J /i ™ SlSSll , LIKE A PRIZE FIGHTER 3S S ■ s . cre i HHPII ( NEARS OF AGE -LOTS, OR- WM
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
rrs But that whole \ j "as the limited raced i'll give You s/^ RAILROAD ADVENTURE STARTED WIT DOESNT MATTER OVER RIBBONS OP STEEL; AN) OKi jj aWD J "THINK WHEN I WENT TO THE TELEGRAPH J " HOW I WRITE IT, JUST J WITH ITS HUMAM CARGO S y QU DOMT \ MISS TODD | OFFICE TO GET MATERIAL FOR -A SO IM/KE IT SEEM ’% LAUGHING GAYLY WHILE J J WILL LIKE / A Jo^ C^ o " . * EAL ’ ) DUSK CREPT INTO THE ) L FURTHER.’’ fL IT? I . ,*.pt ‘^ Ir< ' ' n -i,,
WASHINGTON TUBBS II
/fIOOMED TO BE SHOT/ wash and easy\ C as 1 WAS V HI H0 ' A BIRPIE - 0M ' SEE ARE TRYING TO EVOLVE A PLAN OF ESCAPE, _SAYING, PRETTY BIRDIE. H RAY WHEN PRINCE PHILBERT IS PLACED IN THE PODNER, / FOR THE BIRDIE[ ADJOINING CELL.IJ"" 1 , , . mt ,p WE / (///ss//,iyiZ?y(£?J>A i IT- { whoops/ it's a palace couland FIT FOR A kINQ. OUT WITH ■ ■ I),TV’
ALLEY OOP
S'WEY know /3UT I CANT SEE HOW HIS ARRIVAL rRAMMOSAUPUS! J|ggnmjf|KWß WILL HELP US / I WOOL O :ll take a bite MmW rather face any^ — ( Njt of anything/ wmn a three yeah, t ■IE CAN f rlt iM mu# VTWAN THAT fc __^''' /BUESS THAT £ p ..... ■ Bur
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
f wonder how soots ts oernwc, along! ! gosh,sues a champ,ip t b/er saw one! "! SHE'D NEVER SAX - SHE'S SUCH A , M , . ~. - . . _ llr n| W'JMr-Y LITTLE ’.HIM.
TARZAN AND THE LION MAN
Atewy. the Arab, slipped silently away into the gathering dusk, but not before he had seen Rhonda Terry replace the map in her portfolio. To Rhonda the strange parchment was only a property in the movie they were making, but to the cunning henchman of Sheik Ab el-Ghrennem it had special significance.
Shop in the "Buy-Way"—Downstairs at Ayres—Where You SAVE on Everything for Home and. Family!
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Marcus regarded Rhonda with kindly eyes. “What’s wrong with you and Bill?” “I haven't the remotest idea,” she answered; “he just avoids me.” Their conversation halted abruptly when Naomi emerged from the tent, pale and drawn. “When are they going to bury Maj. White?” she asked tremblingly.
—By Ahern
OUT OUR WAY
r W Hi; M f h u ls t rITiTfo f £ M E L " V 1 111 w°ool H t? \ll , i#|yWl K_ ASLEER LEAVE HIM lIIR, |l| l.|
H'MV 60SH. f DO 'V PITCH ME A KNIFE, 1 JUMPING' WE HAFTA SPEND \ GIRLS. IT'S TIME /3LUE BLAZES; OUR LAST MOMENTS! TO PRUNE THE / A FELLA ON EARTH LISTENIN'] HAT TREE. / CAN'T EVEN T-% ■ I _
/a'j . (va fftimh NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M. REG. U. S. PAT OFF/- £3
r ive BEEN ...MEBSE l CAN HELP f THERE'S A MAN WE MET AT THE AIRPORT HER, WITH OUT HER KNOWING 1T.... QUITE OFTEN ...SOME SORT OF AN IMPORTER, KNOWS, GHE'S DONE ENOUGH TO HELP M£ t BELIEVE ....PEACH OF A CHAP...GUESS I'Ll. _ DROP IN AND HAVE A CHAT WITH HIM •• • • TOU NEVER. CAN TELL | T
“After dark,” Marcus answered. “They don’t want the Basutos to know where they’re buried.” Naomi shuddered. “What a horrible country. I feel I shall never leave it alive.” “You won't leave it dead,” said Rhonda. Naomi sniffed. “They won’t bury me here. My public would object. I shall lie in Hollywood!”
\ POSITIVELY.’ I ) |TS £ASy - UUST HANDLE YOUR WORDS WISH 1 COULD ) C° RRECUY ’ INSTANCE, IF YOU WROTE TO A WRITE LIKE ,/ HOMELY GIRL, TOU COULD TELL HER THAT WHEN l!n ,f / YOU GATED INTO HER EYES, TIME CEASED , j ITS ETERNAL FLIGHT... BUT TtXJD REALLY \\ ■ \_MEAN THAT HER FACE WOULD STOP _^A m f '' T. u. s. pat. V yy* ©1935 by \ea service, inc. {g* V- ' Y
That night, white men and black each carried their own dead to the edge of the camp and buried them. Tney smoothed the earth and covered it with leaves. Tomorrow the safari would march over the graves and erase all traces. These men hoped they toiled unseen; but at that moment keen eyes were on them!
—By Williams
—By Blosser
—By Hamlin
—By Martin
—By Edgar Rice Burroughs
COMTC PAGE
—By Crane
