Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 August 1942 — Page 23
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THIS CURIOUS WORLD 1 en vou SPEAK OF THE | YFoLR corNERS OF THE EARTFS, “IT'S A HANGOVER. FROM THE DAYS WHEN SOME , RACES BELIEVED THE EARTH AND UNIV WERE SHAPED LIKE A._ PYRAMID. ™
—_—
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
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With Major Hoople
EGAD, ALVIN! SUPPOSE YOU INTERRUPT THOSE CLASSICAL RENDITIONS LONG ENOUGH TO TAKE THESE TROUSERS TC SAM THE TAILOR! «« HAVE THEM Q, CLEANED AND PRESSED AND ASK HIM TO SEND ‘EM OVER #
7
SURE, UNCLE AMOS! BUT T'M NOT PLAYING %X CLASSICS wv JUST WORKING ON AN IMITATION OF A TRAIN WRECK IN A TUNNEL WANTA HEAR. HOW T PLAY A GOOSE FIGHTING WITH
COPR, 1942 BY NEA SERVICE, ING, Te M. REG. WU. §PAT, OFF,
\ . op . 2. DINGO, CURIOUS DOG OF AUSFRALIA EXISTS IN,THAT COUNTRY BOTH A WALL AND A DOMESTIC ANIMAL,
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ANSWER—Broadjump; Jingle Jangle; Idaho.
No, the Auto Is Not in the - Cellar—It's in the Parlor
\- NEW YORK, Aug. 6 (U. P)—
NEUTRAL SHIP DOCKS; AMERICANS -ABOARD
BALTIMORE, Aug. 6 (U. P.)— Flags were flying and the ship's
(orchestra was playing rhumba mu-
sic when the 10,000-ton neutral Portuguese ship, Serpa Pinto, ‘with 29 passengers aboard, docked here today. Sevéral of them were American citizens. \ Among the first passengers to land were four refugees from Ger-man-occupied France who were taken to Ft. Howard near her for examination. ! According to naval ntelligence officers the passenger list included & woman who had worked in the American embassy in Berlin and two employees of the American consulate in Naples, Italy.
Aboard the vessel ere 15 American citizens of Portuguese descent.
CAN YOU ‘NAME THREE
POPULAR SONG TITLES PICTURED HERE
Th
One of the few persons ever to have seen the inside of the ram-
shackle: Collyer mystery mansion on Fifth ave. reported today that the house does not have .an automobile in the cellar, The automobile — an ancient Owens magnetic —is in the parlor. “Also,” said Claremont Roberts Morris, a real estate man, “the house hasn't got 17 grand pianos, as the rumors say—it has only 10.” The Collyers—Homer and Langley—retired to the red brick house in 1909 and have emerged only infrequently since. One of these occasions, Mogris said, was when they appeared g's bank in 1933 to buy a piece off adjoining property. “They were dressed in old-fgsh-ioned clothes,” he said, “with gates ajar collars, high oldtime socks, and
BETTER FURNITURE! ,
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JK \ Fol \. VEYA
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TAKE THAT UP
queer old hats. They pulled money out of all their pockets—$7500 in cash.” ' The Collyers, decendants of one of the city’s oldest families, are about to be evicted from the house for non-payment of mortgage feés since 1940. Morris said he is sure they have enough money and that some other reason must have led to the default. Neighbors have been watching
daily for marshals to serve the eviction notice.
LEAGUE DONATES BOOKS
Miss Mary Frances Grant, president of the Young Communist league, today announced that the organization had donated several hundred books to the victory book campaign of the Red Cross.
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Ta rh’ ~ COPR, 1942 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. \!' . T. M. REG. U. S. PAT. OFF.
WES, WHY © IT FOLKS - READ EVERYTHING THEY SEE IN A DOCTOR'S OR DENTISTS
OFFICE AN' IN STREET CARS, BUT | FORGET. ABOUT YOUR-
NEVER SEEM TO SEE A SIGN ON
A FARM OR RANCH? THEY'RE USIN’
OUR CATTLE SALT FER STOVE
- —By Williams WELL, IN DOCTORS OFFICES AND CROWDED CARS YOU READ TO
SELF--BUT OUT IN THE OUNTRY YOU PON'T READ TO FORGET
ox SAY S50 CATTLE CAN DRINK
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A(6C N32, DAES
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THE FORGET-IT-ALLERS
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THANK GOODNESS THESE OFFICERS ARRIVED IN TIME /—HEAVEN ONLY KNOWS HOW LONG WE COULD HAVE KEPT BATTLING HIM OFF rr=
DEAD IN BUS-TRAIN CRASH IN MISSISSIPPL
JACKSON, Miss., Aug. 6 (U, P.)’.— At least eight persons were killed and many were injured when an Illinois Central passenger train and a Greyhound bus collided at Crystal Springs, 35 miles south of here, the state highway police announced. The highway police quoted the]. conductor of the train as saying that eight bodies had been recovered from the wreckage of the bus. The accident occurred about noon, at the “grade crossing in Crystal Springs. State police said; the bus was carrying about 50!
passgngers toward Jackson from|! YOUR FATHER"
New Orleans. The train was north-| A as
bound. : I. C. ticket agent W. A. Pleasants WHILE WE @0 of Jackson confirmed the accident and said that he had been informed it was a “bad one.” Ni Me
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WASHINGTON TUBBS I WE JUST CAN'T
DOWN, DA
OOTS AND HER BUDDIES
OH, TH
AM T REPAY YO'? Ne
ANK YOU CAN COME TO HEADQUARTERS QUIETLYYOU PEEPING TOMS
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§ Featare U. 8. Pat. Of.— AR rights
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[ THATS A PEACHY IDEA, DEAR’ LETOLD EASY | YOU PHONE AND ASK HIM, « DARLING?\ WHILE 1 RUN DOWN TO D0 YOU SUPPOSE \ THE HAIRDRESSERS
WELL, AS | A MATTER OF
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\F \T WOULD BE CONVENIENT MR.
Y! BRING
i IN TIME.
OR EARLY EDITIONS? WONDER WHAT THEY'LL CALL HIM="YOKLIM THE GROPER’: { OR “ABNER THE. GRABBER"?
YOUR OLD PLANTATION IN DOGPATCH ARE. FASC! | SUPPOSE. THE DOGPATCH BELLES £ ARE LIKE 7 SCARLETT OHARA!
(HOT DO&! THE PROBLEMS SOLVED, EASY. NOW LET ME SEE... MILK, cr Same a
SAY, DON'T YoU WORRY ABOUT J SINCE. TH'
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OF ALL TIMES L MOST SEAS | — OUT \N THE
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1'D GIVE MY I DOT HOW | SHIRT FOR A HOW MUCH MORE DRINK...IF I OF THIS T CAN TAKE HAD A IF THIS |S MODERN WAR, \ SHIRT! GIMME THE OLD TIME : "AFFAIRS WHERE A MAN HAD A CHANCE
ITURE
HES NOTA DEBLTY? TAM—~ AND N To BON
TRIAL / Yall
GUYS, AN’ STOP YOUR DADGUM YAPPIN'! THE ONLY PEACE 1 GET 1S WHEN I'M BUSY NAPPIN® !
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— = 2 a == ATH _ GOPR. 942 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M. REG. U. 8. PAT. OFF.
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Scientist in Bomber Warms
Disease Germs With Body
quantities of the vuccine daily, with able. This also was flown over by output still increasing. Production 2 bomber. of milk and beef in Britain is exEverything is going smoothly now,| pected to go up materially as a
needed in his work was nct avail-
By Science Service WASHINGTON, Aug. 6.—One of the war's little dramas of scienge is contained in a now-it-can-be-told story that comes from the agriculture department. It is.of -a scientist who nursed a tubeiul of dangerous disease ‘germs carefully with the warmth of his body dur{ing a freezing flight to England, as a mother might shield her baby from the cold. )
The agriculture departme a vaccine that protects against the deadly disease [~ losis, or contagious abortion, which
causes the loss of thousdnds of un-
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born calves every year and also produces the persistent and debilitating diseas¢ ‘known as undulant fever among human beings. It is made by chemical treatment of the disease germs themselves. ! This vaccine was needed in Britain, for the protection of the island’s cattle and maintenance of the food supply. Dr. C. K. Mingle of the animal industry bureau was assigned to co-operate with British veterinary scientists in the production and distribution of the vaccine over there. - With a tubeful of the virulent
germs, he took off by bomber some
months ago from Canada. A blizzard was raging at the time, and
he kept the germs from fatal chil-
ling by tucking the tube inside his flying suit, where the warmth of
his body would keep the culture
up to the
necessary temperature. : ea ; d
A Champion Maker of Sub Chasers Says:
The new Quaker Puffed and the new Quaker Puffed
Dr. Mingle reported on his return.| consequence of the protection to be The laboratory is making large given the” cattle. :
