Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 May 1941 — Page 19
TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1941 -
ABBIE AN' SLATS
Compr. 191 by United Pentare § ci Tm. Reg. U, 8. Pal. OR. AR rights
60 OUT WITH You MN TONIGHT, BARRY-~|'D LOVE IT%
THE HOME OF LOLA LOTUS, WHOSE PHOTOGRAPH ADORNS A MILLION BOYS COLLEGE DORMITORY WALLS
MR. BARRY BARRY KENT# 5's A KENT CALLING, | DARLING-BUT He's TERRI ‘ / BROKE # WELL PROBABLY WANT TO
POOR CHAP” HE HASNT A CENT, I'M SURE. IF | WERE AN ORDINARY GIRL I'D GO TO A HOT-DOG STAND WITH HIM=BUT | HAVE A REPUTATION TO MAINTAIN=1 MUST BE SEEN IN ONLY THE BEST PLACES WELL NE ASKED FOR (T= - POOR CHAP» ~ 12
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES —By Raeburn Van Buren | OUR BOARDING HOUSE
Sr rs 3 Te EREHT
/
PAGE 19
With Major Hoople By Williams
ESGAD, AREN'T YOU MR. CROCK, THE TWIRLER Zw HAK=KAFF/ £ wan LET ME PRESENT MYSELF ww MAJOR | HOOPLE , SCIENTIST, NNENTOR AND ¥{ FEEL AS NATURAL 3 GOT IN ME BASEBALL SCOUT! COULD T TEMPT J;
7f wawCOME TO DINNER. WITH ME AND LET'S EXPLORE THE
BIG LEAGUES PZ coME ON, SURE POR, THAT'S | RUBE, sHOOT/ MN DISH ww I'D [ wSINCE You
YOU NEVER SEE i TH’ GOOD PART OF NOTHIN == IT SAVES ON SHOES -- Vou GOT TO ADMIT THAT!
CRY == LOOKIT 1 HIM-- NO PRIDE, £2 NO DIGNITY, NO : aq NOTHIN’ LOOKIT Nl H'M WALKIN’ ON [ _\ . HIS STOCKIN'S/
THERE AS FLIES IN} FOR 60 CENTS, A BARN www #7 NOUVE BEEN WHEN DOWE A STALLING LIKE START ©
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f YAN 7 Ri 3 ™ / NA £4 N AHEAD, RUBE | [allt NSE NN a ~ = \ : PS is READY T0 NINA: . er = _ 5 >77 AL EXPLORE aN AYE Eh oa a vi ny VV : J VA ANYTHING = | | com sith savee me THE CUSHION TREAD ail —By Al Capp |
SERIAL STORY—
LOVE POWER
By OREN ARNOLD
YESTERDAY: Carolyn lands safely, after plunging through the storm. Somehow, she shakes off the parachute harness. She sees a road, stumbles toward it. A motorist stops. When she asks if he has heard an explosion, he thinks she is delirious.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
IN THE VILLAGE of Blair, Ariz. | Carolyn and her rescuer found one! ing. It was in a large seemed to be a comstore. An efman in night robe 1ediately when Caro-|
light bu house
bined residence and
answered lyn ran to the door and knocked.
Hello! I—Have you a telephone? May I please call for help? If I can just telephone Boulder Dam, I}
‘ " { Come in, honey!” The woman] r d Ilyn’s frantic talk, | ] “Look here,|
Tyler, ana did
you drop outen a airplane?”
“Well, I'm that glad it's you!
Ain't you cold? They've phoned about you from I expect it's been on the
expect they're a-tearing
Just phone ’em back right now as Quick as you can, and I'll get you something warm and dry!” =» = = THE GOOD WOMAN, not one to be overly excited, was plainly excited. Carolyn grabbed her
“What about Bob? Dr. Hale? Tell me! He must be safe or nobody would know where I—is he? Who called
Honey, set down a minute! He's |
safe. Him and the man flving him both is safe. It was a Mr. Hale that called me. He said—"
That was all Carolyn needed She called Boulder Dam-—specific- | ally, Boulder City, Nev. the town near the great dam. The operator! ere couldn't get 0 or her at the moment the local airport, and t 1 official told her that Bob and the plane had
Bob was abo dmitted, worm ahout her, and he would get word to Bob at once and call off the search. He talked] ut Carolyn didn’t hear | If the kindly woman here hadn't come quickly, Carolyn would have slipped right down to the floor. It was the first time in her life) Carolyn Tyler had ever fainted, but | even a young and healthy girl can| stand only so much.
0nole,
i It took Bob Hale a week to quit|
begging Carolyn’s forgiveness. Almost pitifully he apologized,| over and over, berating himself and humbling himself before her He had honestly felt that her life depended on that parachute jump She understood that = ” »
BUT WHEN HE had gone to tell} the pilot, preparing to jump out himself, the pilot had taken command. The storm danger was indeed real but the pilot had steadfastly refused to abandon ship. | His refusal nad, in turn, made] Bob decide to stay. Bob had tried to weigh the dangers both ways: and in the end the presence of the Z-999 had decided him. | The pilot, Bob knew, could not] be made to realize the extreme! potency of that substance in the! box. A forced chance landing, bumpy and rough, might set off] the greatest explosion in the his-|
i !
tory of man. But even so, Boab|
i
phoning about | it already on a} this just dandy! | You look be-|
ry whichaway, for one as| i sweet as you! Now you|
| crazy, the official
{serious work, I mean.”
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THAT NIGHT
ar. SCHOOLMASTER.
7 NN \ \7 ; SERVICE, INC. TM. REG. U. S. FRANA “Things are getting back to mormal—I'm starting to worry about my
| debts again!”
TREVOR RI ET BETCHUM
| THIS CURIOUS WORLD By William Ferguson
i 1 i i
DID NOT WRITE THE FAMOUS COMPOSITION -~ Z
i | re | eee, COMMONLY CREDITED TO HIAM/ | Twas | | wRitTeN sy | ANOTHER ‘ FRANZ | SCHUBERT; | A AAINOR. COMPOSER OF DRESDEN.
/
COPR. 1941 BY NEA SERVICE, IN i
Z T. M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. | KNEE -JERK REFLEX WORKS FASTER THAN oy THE REFLEX ) THAT WAS YOUR EYES
~
“YOU CAN LEAD A HORSE TO WATER , AND A NAG CAN DRIVE YOU TO DRINK; SAYS WILLARD WULEE, COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO. :
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overpaid already, and that’s that!”|danger. She “knew” it largely she declared flatly. “Please get|through intuition, but it was definright down to your work, Bob. The ite even so. Leana’s eyes had revealed it. Leaa & & na's way of looking at Bob. The little things Leana had let slip back THERE was much to be done.inome The peculiar circumstance of That first day, while she slept, he that first explosion, the hint conhad bought a station wagon, and | tained in the telegram to Leana, and would have carried the boxed X-999| the fact that a train was robbed! to his mountain retreat alone, but | They all added up too much to be she insisted on joining him. mere coincidence. Together they drove the priceless | “I've been terrifically lucky,” Carostuff through the canyons to Blair,{lyn whispered to herself, in apprethence branched onto the rougher hension again. “She’s not likely trail that led to the abandoned to miss any bets next time!” Copper King mine in Tonto Moun-| Leana would be brought here to tain. There they were met by Bob's|the mountain retreat in a few days, workmen, who already had erected Carolyn knew, because there was a temporary tents and shacks, recon- great work facing her and Bob— ditioned the narrow gauge ore track | harnessing X-999, adapting its uninto the mine shaft, and brought in precedented power to engines, inprovisions. |viting other distinguished scientists When the X-999 had at last been |here for consultation, remaking the
elected to stick with the pilot|geposited nearly three-quarters of|whole world of engineering! and their freight. He felt directly|s mile jnside the mountain itself] But Carolyn knew that some-
responsible for the X-999. Bailing out now would be cowardly run-| ning away, and at least Carolyn had a fighting chance. i When it all ended happily he was like a boy released from some hideous dream and it took him| days to calm down again. For]
bath, fresh clothing and a hearty meal Nothing boring about being| vour secretary, at any rate,” she] told Bob laconically. He was still Serious. i “I have raised your pay, Caro-| lyn! As I told you, the Schoen-| field Laboratory is abundantly en-| dowed, and, of course, with the X-899 we have absolutely unlimited means at our command, so—" “So I'm still just a steno being
Bob showed visible relief. where in this rush Leana Sormi “Now, for the first time, I can|would strike again. And soon! breathe easily,” said he. “Now it| Flee? Run away? Chuck this is safe, and no one’s life need be in|crazy job forever and go back to constant danger. Thank heaven for|the city and its safety? that!” “I could never do that,” Carolyn She liked that streak in him.|told herself. “It would leave Bob
{That reverence, that feeling of| helpless, alone!” her part, Carolyn was back 10 humility and selfishness, despite the normalcy after a long sleep, a|fact of his selfishness as a scientist
(To Be Continued)
and his fame. It was another rea-| (An events, names and characters in this son for loving him. story are fictitious.) Loving him? She contemplated that again. Of course she loved him, CITY BARS BARBED WIRE more profoundly than ever. fag PUEBLO, Colo. (U. P.).—If you with the rush of physical excitemen subsiding a Te ave tal yo ® build a gab fence thought to that problem of making |YOU! have to go outside the city him love her. limits. R. J. Roberts, city building inspector, warned that he intended B Boat to enforce the “no-barbed-wire” city MEANTIME, Carolyn knew, Leana ordinance. He said such fences Sormi Was & lurking, were a hazard for’ children.
A | ss
WASHINGTON TUBBS II
F HIM OUTLAW DON'T COUNT 0 BAD RYDER CANT BE AN, AND THE SCHOOL = \ X THEN WE STEERS YET HE HERE OD SEE ~N LAST AND % Tai SURE |S HE CATCHLIM SUTSMARTED LE BIGGEST HALL BEFORE 1 TURN FOX! HERE'S HS RESPECTABLE FOR LIFE ¢
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\ YEAH, AND LIKELY NZ HEADIN' FOR A SPOT TO HOLD LP THE SILVER MINE PAY CAR!
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FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS |
MY GRACIOUS, 75 COLD! WHERE'S | OUT OF THE WATERPROOF AS WRAPPER :
QUICK, GET THE FLASHLIGHT
WELL, MR. LASHLEY 1S
15 ON DEPOSIT IN THE BANK /
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SAY THAT AGAIN, & SILLY! IT JUST MEANS | | YEAST 2 NO KIDDING! REGULAR | BABY! AND SLOWER! J A SHORTAGE OF THOSE | | GROCERY-STORE YEAST... PRECIOUS VITAMINS | | FLEISCHMANN 2 NOU SAID IT!
THAT ARE FOUND SO ABUNDANTLY IN FLEISCHMANN'S 1S CHEAP,
SYLVIA, YOU'RE JUST A LITTLE PEACH! AND YOU USED TO BE SO SCRAWNY AND LISTLESS.
HOW COME? rp IT WAS CAUSED BY
FLEISCHMANNS YEAST 1S ONE OF THE RICHEST NATURAL SOURCES OF THE AMAZING VITAMIN
AVITAMIN B COMPLEX YEAST AND AND RICH IN THE VITAMIN B 8 COMPLEX... AND 1 TAKE IT A WE COMPLEX... AND YOU CAN'T ~ perc ReGILER Nj LOOK OR FEEL YOUR BEST | [{ THE NEW, DELICIOUS
\ WInioUT THOSE VITAMINS | |§ WAYLIN TOMATO
MASH a cold cake of Fleischmann’s Yeast in® dry glass with a fork, then add a little tomatel
juice, milk, or water and STIR till blended. . then fill glass, stir again, and DRINK . . . aday. IV's especially delicious ip i
INN
