Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1941 — Page 38
CR SEINE I ns
:° foves flyer Sandy Ammerman when he
~ Alone—and she didn’t know why.
LIFE FOR DEBUTANTE REY IM ACTIN' GHERIFE] [THERE Won a ain, ahtenea to 50 ts, te ees [Ered |[E SE . again, frightened to go into the ee 2 BAD BLOOD WEEN. EY KEEP THER.
> smaller type that told a more com-
"
~ York.
- was done her decision was made. "Made in spite of the yellow telegram - that was still crushed in her hand.
_ ‘And hadn’t cared. . .. He could send his love across the |- |
' , she: sprained her ankle’ there was ‘no way out of the hollow unless she
Hearts
‘face in the late editions. It belonged : to Margaret (better known as Peg)
winter, °
the offices, and ha: hér reser-
forever growing fainter 'in the dis-
~~ She had not taken Phil seriously while Sandy might have held Peg’s laughing face, blue eyes, and golden curls in inner, sacred place. :
; Ti : i N a | WAS SCRUBBIN’ FLOORS MN ALI | SMAGHES THE LIGHTS OUT WITH THE a A NEW. HAR-DO § T HOPE You perms pre Ta Nice Tae IT CAN'T FIGGER "KAPPA'S RUM-JOINT EAST O'BOMBAY . | | SLOP-PAIL--JAMS MY PAW INTO THAT - ‘F; ANDA TOUCH OF J THE JAM ON THE CRUST J INS. JOB/T00 BAD SHY Een Be : WHEN | SEEN THAT DIAMOND TOOTH | | HEATHEN'S MOUTH, YANKS OUT THE 2 FACIAL COLOR . TOO THICK, JULIET/ww TX IT CAN'T LAST wa BUTTONS ON TH® |. A-SPARKLIN' IN THE RAJAH'S MOUTH. TOOTH. AND RUNS== 7A HERE AND THERE Y THATS A NICE CEMENT '¥ THE MAJOR. WILL VISITORS THAT : ’ HE WAS SITTIN’ THERE SIPPIN'CHAM- 7} WILL MAKE You JOB ON THE WRINKLES, | PUT THOSE WRINKLES — | COME IN HERE "WHY 2 a PAGNE. ni 7\ LOOK NEARS {7( BUT YOU'D BETTER Jy RIGHT BACK,WITH - CROVERTSE A ALMOST PAID A DIAMOND WAS NE ”} NOUNGER, MRS. . LEAVE THE FROWN =A GOME NEW ONES, COUPLE oF VISITORS HOOPLE! THERE wa IT HELPS J) TOMORROW: {y \ THEY WON'T i ME TO COLLECT _ : . THE ReENT/ "I COULD HEAR HIM SCREAMIN' A i | CREEPS BACK INTO THE © QUARTER MILE AWAY. THEN | LOOKS AT JOINT AND 1 SLUGS THE RAJAH THE TOOTH. IT WAS THE WRONG ONE . MY HAND DOWN HIS MOUTH=-AND THIS TIME § YANKS OUT A WHOLE i MENTION A HANDFUL O'TEETH TO MAKE ENOUGH ON HIN SURE 1 GETS THE RIGHT ALREADY TO FEWMORE ¢//'\ |S (= /22\ Gl HR | a9] [= SEND HIM UP | GRAY | FOR LIFE) [ HAIRS = =4 4 . — s LI'L ABNER : —By Al Capp:
BRIDE FROM THE SKY
. By HELEN WELSHIMER
THE STORY—Associate magazine edifor Judy Allen finally realizes that she
is downed on a test flight to the West Coast. Even though he has not crashed, as she feared at first, she still wishes to join him. Attorney Philip Rogers, also interested in Judy, is surprised that she still wishes to go, knowing Sandy is safe. Judy gets as far as Chicago when she finds Sandy’s picture and that of a pretty girl displayed together in 8 newspaper.
CHAPTER FIVE
ONLY ONE MOMENT before Judy < had walked to music. Now, as she ‘saw the pictures of Sandy and a =_ girl whose eyes were wide and intriguing, whose hair was a halo of
curls, the song went away, the violins died, and she was alone.
-YOUNG AVIATOR RISKS
plete story. She could not sit there forever, |: though, with people milling around her. Her plane was going west in a little while, and she must decide quickly whether she was going with it or taking a train back to New
So she read. And when the’ tale
Sandy had made a fool of her.
silver wires to her at the same time that he told it to a blue-eyed, golden-haired heiress, whose name was synonymous with glamor in the social world. Now she recognized that hatinting
Gordon. She had been voted the most popular, most beautiful, most colorful debutante of the preceding
” # ” THE STORY WAS simple enough. Flying over the Rockies, Sandy had sighted a distress signal. There wasnt’ much room for his ship to land for the flat plateau was partly occupied by Peg’s own ship. However, he had flashed an-an-swer that he was coming down and proceeded to do so. Something had happened to the ignition in his descent, but beyond some scratches he was all right. Peg Gordan had put up the signal as an emergency call: She alone was able to fly the airship that had brought the guests to her house party at her father’s lodge ‘inside the protected plateau. She had made it in two trips. When
climbed, which was now impossible, or: caught the attention of another
ship. Fortunately, the report read, Sandy Ammerman had. taken the risk of landing. Had the story Stopped there, Judy ¥ would not have
BUT THE WAS ‘anther paragraph to the story. Another para-
San Francisco; that her signal and his acknowledgment had been ala remarkable coincidence. Judy stood up finally, crossed to
vations, : She refused to return home by airplane, She did not want to ride with the wind and stars tonight. She wanted to crawl into a lower berth and sob until there were no more tears ever. Sob until she would never be sad again. Last fears hurt most, she had read. After them, you moved quietly, head high, eyes shining, and no‘body knew if you walked to sing-. ing drums or listened to
was a difference, though.
SOME AY THis would be over.
ever. Pha Sowa ou say. | She had ver.
note.’ :
They. merely} a ne. Maybe for-
FUNNY BUSINESS
V 72777 % 222777
N AN NN :
=: ) NN X \
SONN
/ aa LOE z =
eC
Zs Bey
[COPR. 1941 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. 7. M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.
“We've just been captured by the opposing army and the Colonel
sends his compliments, sir!”
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
ee
WHITE OUTSIDE TAIL. FEATHERS.
WERE USED GE Ss TREATMENT FOR GOITER Lia ar YET | BIS THAT IODINE ERED IN SHES,
941 BY NEA SERVICE, ¥.M.REQ.U. S. PAT, Fe °- “12
"7 for YicTORY “...
TINUALLY WITH THEIR
By William Ferguson
* YOU RAY UP BILLS TO, - KEEP THEA DOWN,”
herself that there had beefi no reason for inspection, though. You only remembered someone who Lad definitely entered your own life's
His memory would be there, in the corner of her mind, unfil she found ragman to cart it away. Later in the day she would sit down all alone on a red leather seat in a darkened booth somewhere
Jand drink cups of hot tea and
think tke matter through. ‘The train was entering the tunnel under the Hudson: River when she emerged’ from-.the dressing room. Her purple hat sat gaily on her bronze Hair. The silver fox jacket looked chic and luxuriant over her purple ‘suit. But her eyes were too dark, too .wide in the white oval of her face. Her lips, rouged to a deeper red than she usually wore, were the only winging
I 8."
ASS FOLLOWED the porter
Phil. | with oar she stopped suddenly.
Someone was hurrying toward her —someone who was lean and tall
and broad-shouldered—someone who|
took both of her hands-in his strong
You weren’t on any plane, either
west or east, so I made a bet on this train. You haven’t had breakfast, either, have you? Good! How about the Savarin?’ Phil did not mention the trip until she thanked him for relaying her message. “You were sweet to do it. We were flying around on broomsticks, weren't we?” she said. In answer he produced three more telegrams from his pocket. .- “They came to the office, so I asked the switchboard girl to sign for them,” he explained. © “Mind if T read them?” she asked. Then she let her breath out slowly, the way air leaves a bright -balloon when a string is loosened. (To Be Continued).
(All events, names and characters in this story are fictitious)
PHONE - NOW FOR PARTY RESERVATIONS Gala Spening-Nov. 1 ase
H' FUST PHOTYGRAFT ae SINCERELY 3 YOLIRS LORNA
WELL -- SLUICE AND I ARE THROUGH -- HE'S Scot A NEW GIRL!
1 hl ORGET
: asoliy ho NCY!
RED RYDER
Gurr | TH WORS YO AH ENED
Tr X Seay || Pa
-— S$ SAYS IS TOO / Of NE EXPECTIN Y STANWYCK WHOEVER J A ‘Dciae YORTReRgT) RINE | imei s { neato] | SC RSP || BORNE EE RELY YOURS, ¢ INNER- es” ) PHOTYGRAFTS| I’ GONNA JILT ‘EM —AN' THE BARBARA STARUrvCIC: 7) CENT { O/COURSE AH 4 AN WHO BOTH n MARRY LIP WIE" ) BECOMING A BARNSMELL WHUT DO IT ALL T7 | HAS NEVAHHEERD | ‘WRIT PLAIN LORNA GOON”” _{ 15 BLASTED *AH : MEAN? KNOW O’ THEM TWO AS DAY, THET GOTTA FIND EM : OTHER oais—) THEY ERE STRANGE GALS 1 NCERELY TALK EM
~BUT-THEY IS
NDT CREATE PROAR AN'A
Ral f LITTLE DO DOROTHY P LAvOLR AN’ BARBARA
I'M GOING TO MSS THOSE AFTERNOON 8US RIDES WE TOOK EVERY
ERS
D SOUL! IM AFRAID Seta NEVER RECOVER: THIS EMERALD NECKLACE BELONGS TO HER. ITS BEEN NOR EAMLY ; . FOR GENERATIONS,
OLIES OFF My es oft =
iF HE ly GET FIRST, ea
a KILLER. 4 GRIZZLY: .
CONGRATULATIONS,
| ( OLD TIMER ¢ —(Y
"HELLO, JUNE --= 1 GOT OF THAT OTHER GUY GOT on, sar
wren) [( HAVENT Se You SINCE SOMIDR HIGH DAYS! \WHAT
- DAD WAS TRANSFERRED My - i] Eis TO SHADYSIDE Gos WS ie
DEFENSE M DES
E SOLE
OF KEEPING. GUYS IN © MY H
us.
E AR |
ZF
oo» #
. 15.CAUGHT IN | THE ACTION MID-STRIDE
THSINE (ECE Ton dy LIKE SHED £ CAYSGHT A SHOT OUT OF
\ W A = 4 .. graph where there should have|Dpattern. grasp while keen eyes searched hers. beeh only = period. The train was at Newark when ner, I—I didn’t know I'd be BOOTS “AND HER BUDDIES var 2 RL exp that Sandy and|Judy weakened. In the mad scram- |gla see you,” she heard her| -f ora. ff No, oT c 5 (at oN i Miss Gordon had known each other |ble to get dressed and ready to|husky voice saying. “But how did fave on ff IN YA BY ae BE Fe Soar Look 33 RG CAE Boats soe) EERE ang SE for -some time; that undoubtedly leave the train at the Pennsylvania [you know I was coming this morn- 4 RANE Nob “WE WINDOW AN : : US-60o DE CARTMENT the young aviator had had a plan|Station, she did not think of Sandy. ing?” . j dis BEN / To WANE Youll SEE [RMA in mind in charting his course to “Process of elimination, my sweet. / :
Sw SAT, Hel
5
