Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 256, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 March 1935 — Page 15

MARCH 6, 1035

A Woman’s Viewpoint BY .MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

*''¥'*EN Thousand Public Enemies" J. tj the atres?:mr trie of a book bv Courtney Ryley Coop-r •Little. Hr*n Ac Co.* The Capones, the D'.i linger*. the Barrows, the Barkers end their kind cost the taxpayer a pretty penny, as Nlr. Cooper points . ■ $l3O air for each inhabitant. Public enemy. The name fits the k-nd of modern criminal who operates .n cane ar.d considers every etUaea his mortal foe. ji this fee Unit of animosity, yer.ee. filr.e.sf- and hatred which remains •• mgi t form igainst his ref* crnn’;on V v there is a sentimentality v .... the soundest sort of sen'**. Ad I bei;eve we should be a little e y : .'ntal ab>ut mmir.als. The v ; • that n- r ncard them invar i as enemies la one of the reaf : for crime. A fir t misdemeanor committed by a child, especially if he is a child of the poor, is sufflr ent to segregate him into the enemy group. Once in. h" seldom gets out. The gang helps him when he needs aid. so that he may become one of them. But we good Christian folk, do not help him. Like the Levite and Priest in the parable, we draw our skirts asidp and pass down on the other side. Our gestures toward him are always enemv gestures. Ls it any wonder he dies fighting us? • There is a yood deal of f alk about coddling criminals. But i r is not so much the gunmen and racketeers who are eoddl’Tl. We coddle the shv-ter lawyer who under his peculiar code of c'hic-. L- often a party to the deed; the speculators who loot ti; in the name of the law ; the politician who cheats us; the business man who reports to vile tricks to

F FLAVOR

This Curious World Ferguson

\• ,\ (C Pc COLLECTING Q AS MUCH POWER \VA S S ) HAS A goes over \\\\ greater I NIAGARA \ \ ; 3 FOLLOWING £ pal.cs \L *, 3> TH S££T DA - N (prvO > hobby AS is CONTAINED ALL OVER THE WORLD. /X iwESSS t i*?ywtste.Tct ”K. (. ' M>Tiy^^nQj| PLANT boos are not "warm blooded: APE CO 'EREO WITH SCALES. NOT TO u K££P WARM, BUT TO PREVENT EVAPORATION. only must a plant bud prevent evaporation, but it must keep out moisture. A plant takes the temperature of the air surrounding it, and should any moisture get inside, a severe freeze would cause the plant cells to be crushed by the expanding ice. NEXT—What did world armament cost in 1934

HORIZONTAL/ Answer to Previous Puzzle 15 To loiter. 1 Actress la rr , C w OL A SLID US & i'A| 17 Sho _ is plaJ America. ‘jQ'uT in R .P meol “ Katharine L E. ■IDEAL 21 Madhoa9e . 7 p* lß la her current sTr r igl aT>c rfr'Aßl CZAR >co,aeapiar A WE O L AM 23 Not speaking. 13 Couplek ' Di(RU NMNMPA|NJCHOU\S 24 Constellation. 14 Beer NBjL E. G A Ljßßjn3 tt 25 Tip. 16 To scoop out. 6APMMOWEttDI U 27 Female deeT 17 CounciL RANgT AO I V f SBB AT 29 No 15 Auto. AC' ADBv E N U EiTUNiE 19 Greek theater. DMTAF: sMiA 5> QSIEj P™, 0 ** 2® You and me, “ft EMONMmI QQ 1 SML ** '’ s r u * 1 ; #pa _ :>!?di cATEpf[SLMNl ,r " h aji 47 Savage. VERTICAL 4* Preposition. 2* Insane. 51 Deposited. 2 Musical 41 To scatter. 26 Habituated. 5 2 To retard. , 42 Thick *llc* to To dfPirL .. .. 3 Hastened. 43 Edge of a root Edible. sa.ey. 4 Insect's egg. 44 Row of a series 33 5} Hail! 5 Age. 45 By. 54 Ore launder. 56 Sea robbers. 6 Decorative 46 Perched. 55 Solitary. 5S Mesh of lace. meshes. 4S Tolled. 37 Pronoun. 59 She was born 7 Antitoxin. 49 On the lee. 39 Period. in , S Since. 50 Permits. *2 Medical Germany 9 Wand. 52 Noise. jc.- U e. 60 She won her 10 To regret. 53 Aye. 45 Matter from fame on the 11 Self. 56 3.1416. a sore. ■ (pi.). 12 Lair. 57 street. aT™ 1 V"" """" JT™ 1 " o""" \i v* Z= tTl-Hl == :& Zc I 1j y I n —nsr r :i 1 hltHtm.

make hLs money. We coddle the I\ncher who commits the most atrocious of crimes and goes unpunished and sometimes decorated. We coddle ourselves when we find our most absorbing entertainment in the courtroom. I* might be an effective deterrent of crime if we could manage to coddle. even a little, the maladjusted, misunderstood, sensitive juvenile who. with the gang always active ar.d the good people always indifferent. grows up a criminal.

BARBER LICENSING IS NATURAL RESOURCESEE HOUSE BILL 201

The label on a bill is no guarantee a.s to its contents, the Indiana Senate discovered yp.sterdav. H. B 201 relates to the 1931 cockfighting law and broadens it to prohibit shooting at animals as a test of marksmanship It has pa sed the House and was in the hands of the Senate natural resources committee. But inspection of the contents of this apparently innocuous bill disclosed tha* all after the enacting clause had been stricken out and a barber licensing bill, which had been killed in the House, had been substituted. Yesterday, Senator Chester K. Watson, Senate natural resources committee chairman, moved that the bill be recommitted. He explained later that the barber licensing bill had gotten into the natural resources cover "by mistake.” "Some fun, eh boss.”

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

AH WAMT TO T£U_'SPir OiT^fcKT If fAA6AH,AH'LL HAVE 1 \ 5 to OO IM TO SOfAE TRAININ', YOU LL HAVE TO 60 J ml I /VSS&f* I'-'-ISE "BEEN PUTTIN' OH }J CN At)lET.— K % WE\OHT, AN' AHfA SEBENTEEN j A Y\V WORD.VOLILL { /1 > POUNDS CVAH CSOCKEY WEIGHT, Vs W\HE DREADNAUGHT | i\ \ NOW 1 -wMliS' "BE WHAT AHhA TSANPY-LEGGBD } \Ts EATIN' CHITLINS AM' / J rfjA CAWN -BREAD. AH GUESS, AN} \f :

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

f WE SNOOPEDf NOTHING IMPORTANT? ( WIRELESS SET AROUND A LITTLE, J||||pll|Sfi JUST SOME WEATHER ) UP HERE f TO HELP REPORTS AMD A FEW^) ‘ YOU P |CK J .

WASHINGTON TUBBS II

Mpgpr. ~

ALLEY OOP

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES

\ ( ; ' . A GEE'. 1 FEEL AUS AWFOL BoT ,E\}Ett \F BOBWiEBB WOT \T LA/ELLV.! VCWiOAVT'S MEMO NOT t'TRY M\G>Ht BE FOR MR.LEE—ONE 9\ECE OF THAT NSELL \T OAOE , AMONG ALL Th’ THINGS V\E MOST ' T'GELL .DOOLON't MA\<E MUCH 6E A r j P O\FFERE^CE ONOSUAL R\NG. //'A / 'V~ -/ ' A 4 7\ BOOT* taye such W# -> iui y* | . gpßf.

TAKZAN AND THE LION MAN

Tarzan stretched out on the grass. “We shall stay here tonight," he said. “Now, if you care to, tell me what you are doing here." Briefly Obroski explained. “If I had known you were one of the safari, I probably would have let the Basutos kill you.” Tarzan declared grimly. “Why?" asked Obroski.

Shop in the "Buy-Way"—Downstairs at Ayres—Where You SAVE on Everything for Home and Family! RE „ P

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

“I saw' one of your leaders whipping the blacks!” Obroski disliked Orman because of Naomi; but he would not allow his personal grudge to sacrifice the good-will of Tarzan which he believed would be valuable to him and his friends. So he explained that Orman had been ill, worried, tipsy—not at all himself.

—By Ahern

j IB? * ra Vm~J? 4" I

OUT OUR WAY

\ / IF VOU’D 1 [ LE- CUCk- \ / THEY kINIDA I LIKE A— UH-\ MOUSTACHE I | LET'S DROP- \ YOUR’E JUST WELL, 1 HOPE \- LONGER, click - CLACK- J JomNA SAY — J I NEVER HAVE j OR- SAY f l TH' SUBJECT. / r-r-R-REVENGS' TO HAVE FALSE A ARE YOU / V J S>UT THINk OF' . \ / I SURE HE / WASHIN'TON, \ ifeETH. / \ <SAVE VOU / If ", PA! HIS HADDA V \ THE RIGHT / j\ j r HAVE A SPRING W\ \ —u. I )- Kiyy \ MOUTH . THEY'RE L- ! i I IA/rC \ OITTIN' GOOD, \ { , JT'\ NOWADAYS, y PORNJ THIRTY YE. ACS TOO SOONI. l ® 1935 BY * SERVICE. INC. I I 7 7CHK:> T. M. REC. V. S. PAT. OFF. J

/Meanwhile, iw far off America, a-hard-boiled\ f worse? rum- V' let ' s TA y£,'! OF THEIRS, BULL DAWSON, RUNNIN’S ANCIENT j THINGS OVER, BUMPS INTO AN OLD PRISON MATE, SLICR PETPOLO HISTORY. WOT I /BULL. I’VE ! / ——-~n / > r .~ , rein*/ic\ need's anew 7 akj idea vou i

BY NEASERVICE. INC. T. M. BEG. UIS. PAT. OFF, y *

HLO .HcCY’.YOGRE NiAH. LNSSEN - \ Avd GEE .FELLA- lIDO *. BAY. I AM. ; 'N T\ME TO If, GOTTA SWELL STOKST . WHEKi'RE YOH f, TH\S VERY M\K>OTE . * HELP’, there, are . Y'TAYE A SMALL. GONSiA COME $ WHY,THERE'S A TOOGH OOOLEB OF TH\N6<bjj PNECE OF DYNAMITE . T'YOOR SENSES BAE.Y.OOWN TH* V'CAKI DO t?EE ? THEK> ■— -n'THxNY. OF 4 STREET, I'OE BEE hi J~y l I E>OMEONiE B'BiDEBS TH\N\<\Ni’ OF FER. J^^ T | 1 voua | !' INC. T. M. REG. P.^Ff^

Tarzan's silence spurred Obroski’s brain to wild speculation. Perhaps this strange man, imbued with a sense of primitive justice, would not accept his explanation. Perhaps he himself, as a member of Orman's safari, would suffer Tarzan's displeasure. Perhaps he would be abandoned here in the jungle! . . .

H"” BESIDES 'STONE ) WS^YWALLS DO WOT A ) V ' PRISON MAKE, ( MAVBS ) : NOR IRON BARS, J MOT, BUT ( * A CAGE |" / THEY ) : ' — f SURE /

... At that moment, Tom Orman and Bill West sat glumly at their campfire. For days they had wandered in vain quest of Rhonda and Naomi, who had been kidnaped by the Arabs. And now for the first time they admitted they were lost in the jungle. “I guess we re too late anyway,” Orman sighed.

—By Williams

—By Blosser

—By Hamlin

—By Martin

—By Edgar Rice Burroughs

COMIC PAGE

—By Crane