Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1941 — Page 19
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES —By Raeburn Van Buren | OUR BOARDING HOUSE With Major Hoople ~~ OUT OUR WAY ie
HE'S ORDERED ) ODD, ISNT IT-- THAT HE PRE- | ; GO DOWN AND FW THAT AN ENORMOUS 70 BAT HERE--RATHER kh eh MEAL !/ THAN AT ONE OF THE SWANK THINGS OUT FROM TOWN
FOR US BUT NOT A
PAGE 19 By Williams
TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1941 ABBIE AN’ SLATS
WHAT A BREAK 7 BECKY'S FIRST CUSTOMER 1S BARRY KENT | JUST WORSHIP THAT ENGLISHMAN”
W- WRAT REDTHERE
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Copr. 191 by United Feature Syndicate. Toc. Lm. Reg. U, S. Pat. Of — AH rights reserved
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HERE'S YOUR ORDER, BECKY. COMES TO $1.75.
YOU COLLECT FROM THE CUSTOMER
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STILL=HIS LIFE 1S SWEET TO HIM. | MUST, TAP THIS RESERVOIR OF TYPE X*= IN A SUBTLE WAY” — JUST CERTAIN AMOLINT NIGHTLY ~AS HE QrEPS HE. NEARER ANDY NE WiLL NEVER KNOW J WHY /
LI'L ABNER
1 WAS RIGHT ” THAT BOY'S BLOOD IS 3 TYPE X=THE RAREST TYPE’-IT IS PURE UNADULTERA s r—\ COULD CONTINUE MY EXAERIMENTS g WF A HAD A PLENTIFLL SU TYPE R77 V7, 5
HM’ -] HAVE A PLENTIFUL SUPPLY =ASLEEP IN THAT ROOM rr
IF | COLD CONTINUE MY EXPERIMENTS =THE RESULT WOLLD BENEFIT All. MANKIND 7 LINFORTLNATELY FOR ° JHE BOY, | WiLL REQUIRE MORE OF TYPE X' THAN HIS BODY CAN REPLENI ’
YET=-WHAT IS ONE LIFE =-COMPARED TO THE MILLIONS WHO Will
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SERIAL STORY— FUNNY BUSINESS
LOVE 0 POWER a
By OREN ARNOLD |Z ” CA V I WONDER WHAT : A] J THAT DREAM MEANT --= I MUST LOOK IT UP IN MY BOOK!
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"DO NOT TRUST YOUR BOY FRIEND--HE IS IN LOVE WITH A BLONDE!
SO IT'S YESTERDAY: Fearing that X-999 has TRUE--caused the mystery blast, Carolyn hurTries to the scene A vast suburban area has been laid waste Carolyn searches for Bob. She must find him CHAPTER SEVEN CAROLYN learned that Bob Hale was safe when she telephoned her Mother at 5 a. m " “He called
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here twice and came out just a little bit ago! Mrs Tyler said, after Carolvn’'s initial explanations He was like a crazy man, honev! Whatever is—?’ Oh, thank vou, mother! I'm all { 1 I'll be home soon. Don't > 0, = you worry.” DR KY “A woman called all night too # ¢ RED RYDER A Miss Sormi. Who is she? She > SR NK) i ——— i Dr. | 7 7 CEA \F YOU LOOKUM FOR. AN' HES PROBABLY
also said she had to locate FELLA FOR ANATUER Hale. “mergenc reasons h DECKER FEL LOOKIN FOR ANOTHE Emergency reasons, She THAT HIM? FIGHT WITH T°
said. She was most distracted, SCHOOLMASTER -=* 1 suppose the whole town is LETS PULL LP, rest
ISS Ro SCT NE TUE
oo ees
—By Bushmiller
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Sean Rennes | MR. DECKER BE ; WAS JU5T TRING CHARGE OF THE CHILDREN WHILE JIM RODE QUT OF TOWN oN eg NN ERRAND
TREVOR 11 WARNE D OL 10 KEEP AWAY TRON CHARLENE!
{ “I let my fiance send me too many flowers—he finally married the girl | in the florist shop!”
Carolyn, vou haven't had any LITTLE BEAVER = and" i But personal rest and comfort] were farthest from Carolyn’s mind. She hung up and immedi-| ately telephoned the Schoenfeld | { 0] {| | Laboratory, where she worked.| [igi nS. Chia 3 nh | iif Nobody answered. She realized! [of (és 3 l $i i that practically everybody would| J] Fi il f of § | | still be at the scene of the explo-| 20 i Ertl We sion. a ; ( She went outside again and a 3 newsboy crying third extras assailed UNEARTHED WN her. She bought the paper, paying a | ES Ahi | ie STAFFORD dime and waiting for no change. | LYE ii i COUNTY,
\ | i Here for the first time she begean| dO | {1 BRT IS THE LARGEST to learn something of the real ex- | : b ANOWIV IN THE WASHINGTON TUBBS II
tent of the damage. In concise, un-| SSRN | . | ~ OUR ENEMIES CALLED THIS EVENING. |) ) emotional words and photographs Baill 0, SENOR! \ THEY WARNED THAT I WOULD BE KILLED / the city's dailies were doing their i a: WAT HAS / - job well. She HAPPEN | TO YOUR | BATH ROOM /
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
BL RT ig ¥d
By William Ferguson
Ze mecoro case gr {\ \ REN BAN CN RB BIC TEAS | | EEF ELLs NT BRASH | [CINE Op ON RC : 0 i 3 a7
HIS SKULL, WM. REG. U. & PAT, OFF.”
FCOPR, 1941 BY NEA SERVICE, INC.
(€0 I WILL DO THREE THINGS. 1 witL )[ NO, NO! \ NOT F IM SMART, PEPE, YES, AND LUCKY, PUT ON A BULLET-PROOF VEST, WHICH THEY WEEL | 1 60 ON THE THEORY THAT IT IS SAFER 6 ALSO PROTECTION AGAINST THE KNIFE, TO RISK THE LIFE AND LEARN WHO ARE I WILL SEE IF THE CAPTAIN WILL ARRANGE YOUR ENEMIES THAN TO HIDE UNDER THE AN ADDITIONAL SAFEGUARD. AND 1 BED AND LEARN eT 7
THEY MAY TRY. BUT ON THIS SHIP, WHERE THERE 1S NO GETAWAY, THEY ARE EXTREMELY CAUTIOUS | THAT iS GOOD. IT MEANS / THEY ARE AFRAID TO USE FIREARMS AND WILL RESORT TO SOME SLY AND SILENT MEANS INSTEAD
00 You a THINK THEY WEeEL DO EET?
read avidls
WILL DELIBERATELY EXPOSE MVSELF “WITH ONLY four lives known to have been the paper after the opening summary, zens can be thankful for a miracle, the Chief of Police said. He warned that other bodies may yet be found although wreckage has been fairly well combed. The four dead were all plant watchmen. In dav-| time the explosion- would inevitably | have taken hundreds of lives. “Two other men are reported missing and may be dead. One is W. H. Delaney, a truck driver for the Metropolitan Transfer Co. and the other is a liquor store owner, M. M. Cragin i “Cragin’s establishment was near the apparent cenier of the explo-| sion and was so completely destroyed that no trace of it has been found, only a great crater showing AND LONGWOOD, on that spot now (see second photo.| FT! ORIDA, IS BELIEVED page 1). Delaneys truck also is TO BE THE missing and so he may vet tun up, CLOES7T TEL safely, his company admitted, but | IN THE L.S. he is so long overdue as to cause| 3,500 RS) grave concern. ) COPR. 1941 BY NEA SERVICE, IW. “Authorities seem agreed that! : there must been several con-| ANSWER-—It would be important because of its light, and its tidal cealed deposits of explosives to have | effect. caused so much damage. - “Unquestionably it was sabotage, police said, although just how a furniture factory and a greenhouse affect preparedness measures is not clear. The railroad destroved was only a branch line of minor importance in the national scheme. “Another theory advanced by Federal officers was that the empty warehouse may have been used
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lost.”
read, “citi-
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IN WHAT TWO WAYS WOULD THE MOON Be AN IMPORTANT FACTOR. DURING AN ATTEMPTED INVASION OF ENGLAND]
TE na Pe) A I A ) 2 (AL
pe 'Y. M, REG. U. 8, PAT. OFF, —By Blosser
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Yee! words A mie LONG ! THEY MADE SENGE TOO ---FOR. THE FIRST TIME IN HER. LIFE J
you say SUE ) IS TALKING THAT WAY TOO?
[weve COME TO CONSULT - FRECKLES REGARDING A (L HEAR A ' LATIN TRANSLATION / STRANGE \/OKCE ! OR ARENT THESE MY EARS 2)
(way, SUE was THE ONE WHO STARTED TWAT STRANGE LANGUAGE THAT WAS DRIVING US CRAZY /
IF LARD SMITH AND HILDA GRUBBLE GO BAC TO SPEAKING ENGLISH, I'LL BE CONVINCED THE AGE OF MIRACLES HASN'T PASSED /
SHOULD WEAR, HER NOW! THAT LEAVES ONLY TWO UNACCOUNTED
have
truth, he was simply a young man| She spoke so vehemently that he! half crazed with anxiety. was impressed and he squeezed her | “You were at the farmhouse when hand in gratitude. Leana Sormi| at happened,” she said for him. |had seen them; she came out of| “Yes. I—It didn t come! The X-|the office building walking fast, Her | 999. The—I heard the explosion. face was even more pale than nor- | You knew too? You knew what had mal, and strained. ! happened?” ; | “Robert, you must come home| Not for sure, Bob. But TI with me,” she ordered, peremptorily, |
guessed. It couldn't have been any-|jenoring Carolyn. “We must be raas a secret cache of saboteurs and thing else, I felt. You had tolg me tonal off oi nothing gry any re in
was exploded prematurely or un- how terribly powerful it was. This 1 on’ intentionally at this time. Foreign proves it. We must—let's make no\ Ee va col: | agents are known to have been—" hasty decisions. Let's be thankful | japser : | Fo os oy ped. All of wus. a heh wat be, surely. + ba ul | Carolyn saw Miss Sormi take S| HOT boat) canTol Wndersiand. stn and literally force him toward | = 5 EB ‘her own taxi. When the driver be- | {gan to explain that he was waiting | “BUT YOU said it was highly ex-‘on order, Carolyn hastened to pay plosive.” land release him. | Carolyn read and re-read. Then! “Yes, but I meant in power only.| But she stood watching, vaguely she found herself walking fup a NOt that it would go off easily. Sud- alarmed in an entirely new way, | street. She had long since lost her den heat, or a percussion cap such as the cab drove off with her em- | friendly taxi driver, hadn't even 2s it used on dynamite—these might ployer and his efficient woman thought of paving him. Presently Set it off. ‘companion. ; she was or the edge of the big! But we had it securely in two] (To Be Continued) crowd of people and cars and found lead containers, with Wrapping (All events, names and characters in this another taxi that could turn around around that and cotton padding on Story Mt Reunions |
her av. {the truck floor. The ‘as abso- Sl ¢ En aed herscl driven directly lutely no possibility—and vet, of MUSICAL PROGRAM
She had herself 3 By course, there must have been!” B AT FORT TOMORROW
to the Schoenfeld Laboratory. the time she arrived its main plant, “Please don’t be too distressed, | Bob.” | A musical program will be pre-|
and its office building were bathed in dawn’s sunshine, and the sheer] “But I am! I sent only a part sented at Ft. Harrison tomorrow | beauty of that was a sort of spirit- of what we have, Carolyn! My night by students of the Central] ual lift. ‘Moreover, she instantly thought was to divide it in separate Studios of Music. The program will | localities to guard against possibil- |include selections by the concert jumped from her cab, ordering it ity of tampering, however remote. | choir directed by Clifford D. Long] to wait, Dr. Hale ran to her. | But the first bit moved has caused and with Mrs. Graham MeggenHe couldn't talk for a moment. He this! That which we have still in |hofen as accompanist.
a SA : ae 1541 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. REC U.S P
(WHY DOES WE PALE T'BR 50 MORNEY~ MINDED ? AFTAR NOU PANS OF PARSON WS TWO BUCKS NOW \S JES AS MOCWH | MARRIED AS IFEN You'o PAO WM A _} am MILANON , ANT Yoo TF NIN .
. SRE (175 cil dy I ©OE6S YOU SRNR WOOLON'T NR v
BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES
LUE NEMER FEAX 50 O\WSCOURAGED \N MY LIFE ,ONGLE TOBE | HERE I FIND THE GRRL LT'UE LOOWED FOR AL, MY L\FE wes AND THERE'S NOTHING 1 CAN ©O0 ABOUT \T\ \
G\RNS TOoOAvY TO EARN A LWNG | THERE © MY ARE VOSRO TO PLENTN = AND \T Takes MONEY wee
1 WHER AW WAS YOUR oo AGRA BOY AN GAL PAINTING « BUT TARAS ONLY BEEN A MUCK ON PARTING REM RR Ty WALLED OFF AN’ \ \ QO MITORED wo AN’ OAT'S | A AW Whe TO Wt
THE paper had thorough coverage, amazingly so, considering the magniture of the explosion and the| <hort time since it occurred, even though the officers’ theorizing was entirely wrong.
0 Hi [COPR, 1041 BY N nh Vit | §C. 1, 1, REG, U. & PAT, OFF.
FLEISCHMANNS YEAST \ IS ONE OF THE RICHEST NATURAL SOURCES OF THE AMAZING VITAMIN B
COMALEX... ano ITAKE IT Ww " IN TOMATO hoe!
1 WAS Tou) I HAD A YWITAMIN B COMPLEX DEFICIENCY.”
YEAST? REGULAR GROCERY-STORE YEAST...FLEISCHMANNE ? "77
RIGHT 100%! FLEISCHMANN'S 1S CHEAP AND J RICH IN THE VITAMIN B COMPLEX \ AND YOU CAN'T LOOK OR FEEL
YOU USED TO BE A SCRAWNY KID WITH NO BOOM _ATALL! HOW
vee YOU can't stop 4
WELL, GET THIS...IT MEANS A SHORTAGE OF THOSE VALUABLE VITAMINS FOUND SO ABUNDANTLY IN YEAST AND RAW LIVER
saw Robert Hale. When she
just jabbed a finger at her awkwardly and swallowed. “It’s all tight! All right!” Carolyn murmured, © intently. “Dont feel badly. Please don't! Come on inside, at once!” He didn't look like a boss now. In
the laboratory must be moved far away at once! With utmost personal care. I will do it myself. The great loss this morning is too ap{palling!” “You tried a logical way before. You must not blame yourself!”
{Alma Jo Monroe, contralto; {Ruth Girton, soprano; Miss Rose! | Marie {Georgia Neargarder, | E. Ford Blanford, basso, and George
Assisting the choir will be Miss Miss
Mis s| accordionist;
Campbell, dahcer:
E. Lucas, baritone.
MASH a cold cake of Fleischmann’s Yeast ing
dry glass with a fork, then add a little tomate
Rf] juice, milk, or water and STIR till blended ..
then fill glass, stir again, and DRINK ...
