The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 17, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 25, 1939 Page: 2 of 4
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THE LAMPASAS LEADER
Star Dust
By RUBE GOLDBERG
SPEED WAGON
>un<
and:
their
HEDY LA MARR
to the
By J. MILLAR WATT
OTHER
Sierra
By POP MOMAND
lorses
BY HOBAN
then
moat
changi
pink,
BEGGING YOUR
PARDON, SIR—
r So I LL
WAMB
ID GO
THRU
WITH
‘Finally Myras trapez-e.
LbWERED TO NCR
AS SME BALANCED OHUe WIPE
' CHIEF- '
FOR G.VKRY-
thinks!’ .
/MV NERVES AKc
AIONt T&o STEAD?
BUT I'M up HERE <
, NO* — /•irrii -/
OH!
| WE'U.
Be Back
the bo
serted.
FAR. 1
ButchT
MEANWHILE •
VINCENT REACHES
himseli
his gra
nies at
a long
raked
poured]
and all
.banter
teased
“No
Five years ago Shirley Ross made
her screen debut as a bit player in
a picture starring Lee Tracy.
Imagine what a thrill it was for her
when she was engaged to appear
as his leading lady on a Silver
Theater broadcast.
pigutiKse
OKI THE
BOTTOM /
< une /
Bvinf
irbul
The
J SURE---’
CHOP IN .
ANY <
TIME--IT 1
WOULD 86 A
PLEASURE !.*
Senatoi
Breck.
The
at oncJ
Plucky myra now put on her act
W SPITE OF HEP TERRIFYING
experience with alta.
THE ELEPHANT
irounc
eed i
Lanny Ross celebrated his tenth
anniversary on the air by giving a
luncheon to which he invited all the
other men who have been on the air
for ten years or more and suggest-
ing that they form a elnb. Every-
body was delighted with the idea,
but since then Lanny has sometimes
wished that he’d never thought up
the plan. He has been deluged with
letters of pretest from women all
over the country and the only way
out was to form an auxiliary.
yes; n
PROFESSOR
ZEERO
There's a man in California who,
if he could be granted the wish near-
est his heart, would ask that Cecil
B. DeMille decide to broadcast a
play with a good wind storm in it.
The man is Charlie Forsyth, sound
effects expert who officiates on Mr.
DeMille’s Radio Theater, and he has
two dozen new wind records that
he wants to use. During the recent
California windstorms he worked all
night making records of the wind
whistling through cracks in his
garage and through the shrubbery
around his house. They are the first
authentic wind records Forsyth has
been able to make, and he won’t be
happy until he uses them.
Tbp.VA woui.»Hr'
\'*ll i
A"PLay Lomu.
ml nor, wrrU yih *
r A ViH i* ** ns, vioulu .
jfc/YA? » J
l/l HOPE '
/SHE AIN’T
MARRIED
glamour girl of an earlier day, Bar-
bara LaMarr (surely there couldn't
have been a thought of Barbara in
the mind of the person who suggest-
ed “LaMarr” when the lovely Vien-
nese Mrs. Markey was choosing a
name for her American career!).
FINE, HIVE'S'
I YOU CAN
TAKE HIM
A PILLOW
^TOMORROW
INSTRUCTED)--t—---
Cook
be a d
Reli
pertur
once i
said sM
Breck
Louise
ting on
boy on]
in frorl
joying
brougq
But Bd
erland]
fthem, 1
‘■with t|
where I
Senatoi
Irena
meat N
cow! n
I MOOST KEEP
ZE LOVERS IN
CONTACT WIZ
ZE FAVORABLE
STARS '
(MUNCH-
clinch)
HAVE TO PUT L
IN HIS NICK-
X) NAME. AM" .
/HIS ADDRESS
You ve I--
CERTAINLY dong >
Your best to J
MAKE HER /
C OM PORTABLE ,\
CHIEF X L
KMOW she WON'T
< forget that.’.'
other
were
saw I
and vi
With the cops and robbers cycle
Waning,- motion picture producers
are certainly taking to playing cow-
boys and Indians in a great big way.
Paramount has three big westerns
scheduled for this spring and sum-
mer—“Geronimo,” “Buffalo Bill**
and “The Lives of a Texas Ranger,”
a sequel to “Texas Ranger.”
There’s going to be a premium on
Indians in the Hollywood studios,
first thing anybody knows.
VBH.BUT T
NOV) CONFS
THE WORST
PART OF IT,
'FLIP’I GEE.
1 WISH SHE
MAD TAKEN
W LUCKY
piec£T
Muriel Wilson, formerly known as
“Mary Lou” on radio's “Showboat”
program, recently reseived a gift
that moved her to tears. It is a
crocheted tablecloth depicting a
scene from “Showboat,” and was
designed and made by a blind
woman. -
rKlO,JUST
CHRISTIAN
\NAME AND
COUNTESS,I
DEPOSITED MISTER
VINCENT ON THAT
LONELY MOUNTAIN
ROAD, AS YOU
ARE FOR
TOMORROW’S
—- DINNER
, QUICK :
TMCRfcS A CUSTOMER
TURN OUR BUSINESS
CHART UP THE
WAY I
WELL---
TAU_Y-HO|
chi&fie!!
Suthi
lodded
iweepil
never
Friei
time t
argum
Lone T
Irene
tourist]
, advant
■of his]
ground
son an
had n|
Black |
time hl
hatfsd
Believe it or not, Merle Oberon-
had her face washed with kerosene
the other day. The same thing hap-
pened to Laurence Oliver and
David Niven, and all in the cause of
art. Not that the makeup man had
anything against them. Kerosene,
when mixed with paraffin and heat-
ed slightly, provides a quick-drying
spray which dries white, so that he
who gets sprayed looks as if frost
had appeared on hair, eyebrows and
eyelashes.
I'LL- HATE TO
SEE HER GO —
She's Been a
MIGHTY GOOD
CUSTOMER!’
BUT JAIL’S NO
PLACE FOR. TH1
LIKES OF .
HER!'
OtnWAfiEOOS
Aiufruxx.
INTO IT.'
-rue. most AKneawei
NArueEO AMO THE
gentlest mam on.
< EARTH-/"TV
THIS MERE IS LUSH Si
TMORPLE HE WANTS
C© OPEN A SAVINGS
^ACCOUNT. WHERE I
'Kat oces we sign )
A MERE /
reck
iss ej
Gene market, the 20th
Century-Fox producer,
may have thought that Metro
made a mistake when it
abandoned “I Take This Wom-
(an” as Hedy LaMarr’s sec-
ond American-made picture.
Certainly he liked the idea of
taking that woman, to be his
lawful wedded wife. Oddly enough,
there’s a strong resemblance be-
tween the new Mrs. Markey and the
first one, Joan Bennett, as Joan ap-
pears in her brunette wig in “Trade
Winds.” And there’ll probably be a
resemblance in the setting of “Trade
Winds” and the next picture in
which Hedy LaMarr stars—“Lady
of the Tropics,” in which Robert
Taylor will be her leading man.
This business of tracing resem-
blances can go on and on forever.
Old timers can try to find one be-
tween the glamorous Hedy and that
LOT FOR HELPING
US OUT."
He’s 1
in tow
Bre
sons?'
Cool
I was
They
can't l
ellow.
But 1
is the
lid nc
Him c
ODDS AND ENDS—After hi, Thun-
day evening broadcast, Felix Knight
make, a bee line for an Armenian rm-
taurant and a plate of thuh-kebab . . .
At reheartab Kate Smith diirupt, the
man in the band by feeding them Aam-
burgert . . . Be «wa to toe ’Stagecoach"
—J' wiH probably prove to be one of the
tee beet picture, releoMd thi, year.
• Waatarn Nawapapar Onion.
YOU MEAN
HELPING KITTY
I OUT, EH,
1 godie ? hem!
wkll--tha*t
RAVS HER >
BOARD IN r
> a.full!!/
‘Wl Myra be able to weer
THESE SUPREME TESTS OF
NERME AND SKILL ?
AH, GOOD EVENING,
HIVES -NOW ZAT
VINCENT HE IS
GONE ZE WAY FOR
Ze romance she
is clear
(MUNCH-MUNCH)
X'O ENJOY IT,
TOO - WHEN
FT WASN’T MY
POST-OFFICE
ME y 1 HEARD
tV 6RIMGS YOU ^->7>UoN6 HEART AND HEAW OF DE1IOOUC
here? ( £rape-/MuttFlakes*-.
---1/ fs*- \ y
I \ eAR™ 'em.
SO LfcTS
★ Tracing Resemblances
★ For the Cause of Art
★ Indians Above Par
WUUL--GOOO- V---—
BVS.-MISS kitty,) thanks,
ano good 1
LUCKl! X'M
SURE Th' TRIAL
WILL CLEAR .
All th’ charges) been
AGAINST XVERY
< YOU" /XSwcmt!
tance,
men i
loungii
came
Tillson
erra i
turned
becue
Cook.
The
a socia
motion]
"What
“Whl
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The Lampasas Daily Leader (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 36, No. 17, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 25, 1939, newspaper, March 25, 1939; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1215007/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.