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WASHINGTON, T. 0, BATURDAY, MARCH 1928 MUTT AND JEFF—Jeff Is Some Little Digger. YES, THIS 'S THE SPoT,JGFrl AN oD EGYPTIAN TeLD ME IF we DUG Down HERE WE'D DISCOUER ANCTHER —By BUD FISHER. we'tL TAke TURNS ARE You TIRed SQUIRREL WHeEN T CoMES T MAKING A HoLe IN THE @P) [ my faith. T flatter myself that with- | tifled the means. The talks that David | surplus revenues report is correct. | % out it we shouldn’t have come as far |Sangres had had with Jim Mohun | Man seys he was robbed of $62,000 on | _ STEAMSHIPS g [ as we have. since his return had been quite satis- | train coming here from New York. | “But what's the end of it all?|factory and in a few months,it seemed | Reorganization of government de- Haven't we got all that we need? The | there would be enough of @ return on | partments halted. Skilled workmen of | pAd IFIC I INE only thing we haven't got is & yacht, | his holdings to make him & very|bureau of engraving and printing, | A The Comjort Rowte® o SOUTH AMERICA No other trip offers such variety of enjoy- FORD GIVEN PERMIT. Mortion " he " ocess " eoreeats ivopical and you know you get frightfully | wealthy man—so rich, indeed, that he|government printing office and seasick.” could afford to spend the remainder |yard protest inclusion in reclas “But 1_do want the Wetherbys'|of his life in the cultivation of the | tion bill. place at Newport, dear. The price is|scientific projects which were nearest S ridiculous. They're really. gIving it|his heart. The time to sell was not BY GEORGE GIBBS w yet. he was told. Conditions were Author of “Youth Triumphant™ and Other Succe: ar, I'm afraid you're|stili a little uncertain. But the assur- seenery, 1 r of the Andes, great spoiled. We've all of us got Into the [ ances of growing value in his shares metropolitan oit The largeat ships sail 2 | way of thinking that dad can do won- | gave Sangree a pleasant sense of finan- | Gets Preliminary Right to De-||iog 1 F luxuriously ders, like 4 maglelan taking & rabbit|cial security, and he had left the cqtiipped “E 14.350 tons din out of a hat. But it can't go on for- M'nhun offices in a nnn;c;or%l tate velop Power at High Dam. designed and built for ever of mind, which was share s op- 2 5 i f stence | awful slump in evervthing soon.” These pleasant business relations ay e Ford Mo ShruEEed the toPiey . O existence | MG T Kidd ‘we're well beyond | gave David Sangree a feeling of per- | Company a preliminary permic to de- But & Sangree! 1 do wish yowd |being affected Ly that” sald the|sonal interest in the Mohun family. [velop power at the High dam, erected It does help me out such a lot. | Pretty ludy rounding out the discus. |so that the visit which he and George | Aerons the Mississippl river, between sion, confidently. “Bpt 1 do \A‘L‘A'{’: )'Olu d|Lycett were paying had a x;neral as ‘!:.nl“l:‘:(l :2(1 M!!\izprpnl( '”the Bov- xsla“.;u!s l.g“CA‘d flm’fbl angre o : Z|stay this afternoon, Cherry. Mr. Ly- | well as a purely social significance. n an aid to navigation, i ound South America Tours 12 midnight, 51; 4 am., £ L S | et duin S e e o [ ett 13,50 fond of vou.” It “the “danentor had. created & For several months Henry Ford met | | The Pacific Steam Navigation Co. noon, 72. H Lol i 2 £ “Do * you reaily want me to,|rather forbidding impression upon his|With stiff opposition to his project. | SANDERSON & SON. Inc.. . Barometer—4 p.m, 2 3 p.lm,'ru he polite.” + The girl, who | muzay? staid consciousness, the mother was|Which contemplates the organization | 26 Brosdway Ny ork 20.80; 12 midnight, ; 29.747 fher through George lvcet. o 7 ihiloe || Oh, yes. of courser The girl. who | ™ T here's a dear. You can be s0|uitogether charming. Her perfection fof & large manufacturing plant at $ a.m.. 29.79: noon 0 D T e ser® Cheses tahelb. | Mo B rowacd Rer mother. ® " | agresable wiven you iike to be.” | |bewildered him. And he wonderediSt Paul but at a threc-hour hearing Highest temperature, occurred | R NE mother entertain a ot of celebrities. Lo o e ked.| “Oh, ail right” sighed Cherry. “I'll lhow such a charming creature could |before the commission vesterday his | at noon today; lowest temperature, 47, B dn Intely s | €8t into riding {ogs und go later. But |bc the mother of the joy-riding hoy-|competitors had dwindled to one. the} occurred at 4 a.m. today. = > a bk ieds e ’;"“I e “;. cCwh 3'j do put a little ‘hooch’ on the tea tabie |den. Alicia always affected strang-|Northern States Power Company Temperature same date last year: ! C"“““ was disgruntled. Ap-| Hypure J Soniakuow. at do | L e TLydia Brampton on to the {ers that way. If there were deficien- | Both St. Paul and Minneapolis. which | Copyright. 1922, D. Appleton & Co. Cherry )lnhun,"dlu:hllpr of l”nmmv. ‘klrl‘i( father and social aspiring mother, is a typi- Records for Twenty. eal girl of the a flapper in moods, hut | €tay Thermometer—4 p.m., & ; LRI not Mogether spoiled by | Besides, Cherry, you Know, Mr. Ly- ESSEQUIBO or local agents arently there was nothing | Yoy mean. Cherry Hhnologist person. e gives me @ lcies in the Mohun family no one ever (had desired to develop power T ;’n‘vfei‘:‘byul o Tide or spin in | .0 You mean that you haven't no- [ Linolosist persor . e Tried them 36 her door, She always|municipal utilities, abdicated in favor Led Created the illusion of being inca-{of the Ford company pable of mistake. If her children e uating mo- [ Were rather wild, the age and not RESORTS e New York FN@ Fiymouth - Havre—Paris P “Jointhe Experienced Travelers” The Giant Express “PARIS” ___ Wednesdny. March Tth The Magnificent “FRANCE’ Wednesday, March 14th (Sailing £ p.m.) LAFAYETTE. May 12 June 23 Aug. 4 New York—Havre—Paris . sistant chief of the air service, from McCook Fleld, Dayton, Ohio, forty minutes. This time is better Cook Field some time ago, who up land 4B airplane and carried an N The general returned to Wash- House Stresses Relations of and stations in the United States ago. flying from Bolling Fleld to the south and southwest and then dentials to President Harding. The| He was accompanied by Lieut Washington was vice minister of for-| Washington vesterday. but was bassador that “because of my under- 3 - THE WEATHER. dial relations between the two coun- rain and colder; moderate shifting each desires to be governed, I can colder tonight; tomorrow rain and 1o both the government of Japan and | wine i Virginia—Fair tonight, cooler In You may rely upon my hearty €0-|"'\y i\ virginfa—Increasing cloudi- Hanihara declared tion tonight; colder tomorrow and in occasion to assure you of the senti- and of his earnest hopes for the con- of good will and of mu- are based in the Pacific, is & matter of solicl-lwater at 8 am.: Great Falls— |these alternatives paled beside the fow worried he looks.' said that the Allcia Mohun shrugged 4 avid Sangree’s vigit to OVSter | their mother was responsible. ATLANTIC CITY VIS"S PRES"]F AirSpeed Record broke another speed record in panied by 12 Attaches, Pre- | to Bolling Fiela here, 2 dtstance by fifteen minutes than that es- GIVEN CORDIAL WELCOME| until vesterday held the record. air service mechanic as a passen- ington in this burst of speed from Two Nations. and also of one in Canada. He Masanano Hanihara, the new am-| Selfridge Fleld, outside of Detroit twelve attaches of the Japanese em-| riturned to Detroit, fiylng from new ambassador before coming to| Tlayton Rissel, his aide. and who R prevented because of an accident standing of vour previous service at District of Columbia—Cloudy and tries, based upon those high prin- winds. becoming northeast and east. readily foreteil that you will do much colder; moderate to fresh shifting that of the United States, and In car- | Virsinlarhulr tonight, cooler in operation. ness, followed by rain late tonight or Assures of Friendship. north portion tonight, ments of warm friendship that my tinued wellbeing of the American 2 vantage upon which the cor- “To perpetuate and extend these|Highest, 46; lowest, 31. heneficient contracts, which are the Condition of the Water. 1're incorrigible.” @ both to the government and the|remperature. 38; condition, cl . 38; ear. 5 R 5 gorgeous flight that she had missed “The abstraction of husines josity, one would come (To Be Col ued Tomorrow.) N 2 | | In assuming the high and impor- ) entrusted to me, I am ynseious of the weight of sponsibilities. To thelr dis- rge T will devote my best efforts. by the confidence derived from my past experience in America, t 1 shall, on all occasions, move in n atmosphere of sympathy, friend- ship and understanding.” Brig. Gen. William Mitchell, Masanano Hanihara, ACCOM-| aviation yesterdsy when he flew N of 390 miles, in two hours and sents Credentials. tablished by Lieut. Kelley of Mec- Gen. Mitchell piloted a De Havi- Exchange of Courtesies at White| &er. an inspection tour of many posts _ left Washington about a month bassador from Japan, accompanied by { From there he traveled by rall to hassy, vesterday presented his cre-| there to Camp Borden, Ontario. was to have made the trip to President Harding told the new am-{ t© his equipment. Washington in the cultivation of cor- slightly colder tonight; tomorrow ciples of right and justice by which Maryland—Cloudy and somewhat in advancing the interests common winds, becoming northeast and east. ryving out this most desirable end cooler; fresh Shifting winds. In presenting his credentials Mr. | Bes%: followsd by rain late tonight or “It gives me great pleasure on this august soverelgn entertains for you, rejoices in the strength ions between the two coun- cause and the guarantee of Pro&Tess | memperature and condition of the the runabout. and both of oticed what? T . . ¥ people of Japan. Tide Tables. But she kad almost decided on the | e r Tie has looked that somewhere near the truth. As George | (Furnished by United States coast|norseback ride when her mother|twenty-five years. It s s Lycett had said, some water had run 9:26 p.m. “ And he's bringing his friend, Dr.| “Ha doesn't give us a chance 10|pe hud witnessed during the war, Epitome of Events Up to David Sangree.” | consider him-— | some of his younger friends, it seem- Povular.priced one-class ships. and geodetic survey.) vorry (o be wealthy | b Z z i wder the bridge since he had been Low _tide, . and|®00Ke Fes, 1 understand. p e e reiant which applied as : March 3, 1923. “Good Lord! That settles rm! “But would we consider him even | 5G9 7Ha A taken tne war as & kind of Roussillon - Mar. & Mar. 23 o J ‘.H‘.\:“onxm-h which they re- Chicago Mar. 8 Apr. 17 May 26 high tide, .m. and| T had a note from George L¥Celt.| gy i1y, “but I can't remember ever | NOMET SWUTRENE O gree as it did The Sun and Moon. 6:02 p.m. o [LH R H E 8 La Savoi A 5 Iy 2 Tomorrow—Sun rises 6:38 a.m.; sun f = W‘ S.” a LA e o : Schaihe iy darling. He's coming out this after-| geeing him so gray and tired look- | {0 most of the people that he had Today—Sun rose 9 wm.; sun sets T 7 May Y RE. 3 Eochambeau April 28 May 31 July 7 sets 8:08 p.m, in it had been too horrible an experi- FOREIGN, p y 'y Tomorrow—Low tide, 3:12 a.m. and | noon {ing. Tdon't think any of us consl oot But whils Sangree had heen 3:36 p.m.; high tide, 9:02 am. and| “Really.” sald Cherry, listlessly dad enough. muzzy Moered by | the tragedies that Nev: York—VIigo (Spainj—Bordeaux 5 6:5 5 i il bk i 2 ce to be easily forgotten, for he had illions of marks seized by French| La Bourdonnais Mar, 22 Apr. 26 June 9 Moon rises 6:57 p.m.; sets 6:52 a.m. ! i e hrouah three tvphus epldemics | B ITTLE CTORIES !96’531111??& Black Pussy Is Satisfied. atisfaction’s always nice o though you pay the price. —Black Pussy. It is a question whether Black Pussy the Cat was more hurt than frightened or more frightened than hurt as she ran for home on three legs as t as three legs could take her. She had climbed a tree in the ©Old Orchard and had thrust & paw down in a hole expecting to catch a bird. Instead of this that paw had been bitten, and bitten hard, so hard that Black Pussy had tumbled out of that tree. Never had she had such an experience befors, and she didn't Automobile lamps to be lighted one- il ia on way to Ruhr. Kemal said to be/ The Fidelity Tourist Co.. Gen'l Agent, half hour after sunset. N ‘ W than_his share of y { nd had se ore = 1408 New York Ave. N.W., ! i A e tarvation. He was sur- | winning Turks to peace. Ruhr hostili- %, York A% s of indifference | i.q fogred in sixty days. Ambassador || Dirsetly cn the beach, in the Chelses seo- atod 1 o very side. t and fresh water in ail priva aciang. wien e Yoached | Harvey speaks at dinner of London i e Mhe Hendulum had already | Press Club. Ruhr resistance rumored tent with costs of service. ady Bend for booklet. awung wildly and a frenzy of Ea¥ety | ax gabotage is reported. Prince Fried- B. THOMPSON & CO. was the order of the hour among the |, \ "\ peim von Lippe, German na- ME TO SUNNY Weather {n Varfous Cities, 2 Te : b ” h As ex : e = : peonte that he knew. | This Wa%8% | lionalist agitator, arrested by French Ulotes o DITERRAN 7 QX Philday, the breaking of the discipline | authorities. Ambassador Harvey's ad- l H E gt p of war. an interim of self-indulgence | gress causes comment in Great Brit- 9 | *LARGEST AND FA . XER. 5 = 5 > 4 . ar.7 Apr. 19 Amufla:u,:l’lly‘R ATLANTICCITY.N.J. | sGuillo Cemare.. o' B woutig ¥ Kwpraisak s2ueeg] ¢ 1d not last. But it had 8l-lain. European citles declared flooded 03 Cloudy S Yiated ‘mearly two years and|iiin bogus United States bills made i Gloudy b N | TeAdy e elin of a winging back | in Russia. France demands guaran- A C oA ) A St ihe pendulum to normal. tees of United States and Great Brit- | | Theideal American plan hotel Ft.cloudy | S . he found the|ain if she quits Ruhr. dizect] Cloudy L G In the United States he irectly on the ocean front same condition of affairs, if anything NATIONAL CAPA 600 - § \ a rmeating car Jightly exaggerated. and permea! CK GARAG e . _ Bandits gag guard at factory S Galter Baziyl 5 Gl July T ITALIA AMERICA SHIPPING CORP. 1 State St. Asbury Park Atlantic City Haltimor Birmingh Bismarck Boston Buftalo Oharleston. Chicago Cincinnati. Gleveland 11 Ptcloudy enver . : I Cloud, Detroit . A El Paso. Galveston H Il classes of soctety. The essentialf e O Ber e SOUPH AFRICA materiality of the army philosophy et n".;.x‘ d‘iln a r.4,:.‘.|num~:“. if not to a ;2(:“0“‘3“1“}‘»3“7,9 ;:‘xl.nl:i(a"’r!’r".:a.:“ - HOTEL CONTINENTAL ks C;’,%’TLE - Jestruction, of old ideals, to an uB-| ..o yrges United States membershiD | Always open, slways ready: terms moderate. concern for the value of human Ue | in® tniérnational court set up by | Weits o Bhose "M WALSH DUNCAN. " | 1" e sot forther tnformetion appiy taste for rec s league of nations. Dry law tilt puts COLONIAL, L VA, ‘ e o g Honae (o uptos BIINEACH, VA Sanderson & Son, Gen. Passenger AgtS., 26 Broadway, New York, Ft.clouay 4 k 2 arime, offered in evidence every d&Y | yoyge in uproar. Many raises, no cut, COLONIAL HOTT 1 Or Any Steamship Ticket Agents. 238 i 0.08 Clear \ The v & v o - w ‘R SYM fan il ses of the newspapers. for United States employes in_com Ptelouds | uyoU NEEDN'T WASTE YOUR SYMPATHY ON YOUR FATHER. BUSINESS | N U DRSSO L€ 0015 ons had | 128 HOE, S0CAcation bill. House | Open all tie year. Healthiul good Bnow 5 4 E ! 3 . IS A PART OF HIM. 1T'S HIS LIFEBLOOD." i rical erspective teache: medicinal artesian ter; quiet, hor ki e Cloud; him a historical D - fight rages as galleries urge teacl : ql melike, d f;lur’ Fhich he applied to the pruelnt ::‘ld p.?y bill for District of Coiumbia. St {':_h";x.l.. m‘l;he b-. bunggab: ml‘:o.;:l Amert 008 Cioady uation for his own interest and|retary Wallace serves complaint on | cod plin 818 wesk B30 dar. Bookiel Prcioudy | oft.” said the girl, rising it he gave us the chance?" she in-|amusement. Every way the repatt Armour-Morris combine as violation ner_and = v s t d stockyards act. Postal P i ; +be : B b e veler looked he saw signs of | of packers and stockyar A G Ty e UlpRsZece s) e o i e e P \fen | Gecadence which amazed him. To|gervice begins enforcement through EDUCATIONAL. “That freak! Oh, muzzy.” Rorry Tor dad He ought to take a|George Lycett, who acted for the|out nation of requirement for home | GIVIL EBRVICE examination for editorial 25EBRIRLBIRREEL NewYork to Europe Plymouth, Cherbourg, Hamburg £ i [ » > v i & res s his mentor and guide (a8 |mail boxes in cities. Action on the |cierk, salary $1.200 to $1.800: i1 instruc- [ meevhat do you mean? Have you day off mow and then’ =~ = | BCt expressed il “like Virgll con- | President’s request for authority to |tion hegins todsy. e ini Sebvice Trenira: | "She nodded. At the Golf Club. I|my dear.” Alicia Mohun's siender |ducting Dante through e eioner. | mresy o hent seaion of Congress. Pl g g {asked him. I don't know why—un- cove daintily in and out|most depths of the infernal re v 9 3 t e PEtlouay | 1T dlouknt o wouldnt come.” | Ameng. the Rowers hat she was re.|IC scemed that David Sangree wag|Dr. Hubers Work made Secretary, of : o pewereemamact Lute Portiaen, OB ey ut he is coming. my dear. And| arranging. “You needn't waste your | taking the manners and, CUsIOmR o0 (RO, 3 B oS imaster General. Dr. | steward Scll I RELIANCE-Mar.31 May 1 May 78 8. Take City 2 3 022 Snow he's one of the Sangrees. 1 looked | sympathy on vour father. FHe would [ the qa¥ o0 SEOPUERT, (o phdse in [ Work proposes that postmasterships |3 00! % une 26 July 24 Aug.21 1 ¥ Cloudy [ him up in the ‘Social Register. Quite | rather be in his office. with his fingers | merely reflected & DEISRE Tt (o0 | he ion-political. Representative W. = Aceredited RESOLUTEJune 12 Jal Cloudy | all right. Very fine old family and|at the pulse of business, than doing | the national life = Sturdy OREIEC| Be A Cockran, democrat, of New | 1202 F St. M. S || ALBERT BALLIN[a: Clear some money. Distinguished, too. Har- | anvthing else in the world. Business | that he was. he believeld WL TS B | Lo R0 N an taken out of well Hamburg Dir Clear vard Foundation Research man and|is & part of him. 1t's his lifeblood ate good in the Kreat )0 e as- |after walls crash in at Savage, Md. amburg Direct one of _the best known—eth-| “Then all I've got to say is that it |People must ultimately gain the but dfes as result of injuries. Farm by one-class cabin steamers FOREIGN. nogra- isn't nourishing him much,” said |cendancy. credit bill passes in House. = BAYERN 8 Apr. 19 May 81 (8 a.m., Greenwich time, today ) “Ethnologists.” said Cherry. as she | Cherry. “Are vou sure that every-| But David Sangree wagged his head & THURINGIA.. Mar. 22 May 8 June 14 Suauons. Temperature, Weather. | remembered. “Ie looks the part,| thing ix all right, Muzzy?" and blinked through his glasses. His DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. i i ER or: %5 May 17 Jone 28 Leodes, Keglasd. ... 4 + clowdy | Muzey dear—thin, with gogEles.” | “Of course, you foolish child. You|reading had made him belleve thai SCHOOL OF Arply to United American Lines. L DU Cloudy | And then, s an after thought—"He | don’t know your father as I do. What | luxury and vice were the legacy of| Mothers Sa &t white Houss and WASHINGTON | || 50 Braier, New otk of Toeal wpent Copenhi K Ciey noys me.’ ut such a notion as that into y victorious people: T nk the Pre: FOR SOME TIME SHE GLARED AT | Sucthoitn Bweden.. Clondy “In what way?" Reaa™ at Into your | e 0T O ain, that his own people |the teachers' salary bill. Capt Rob- P PR S r et Yaio | || UNITED AMERICAN LINES SPOOKY. AND SPOOKY GLARDD | Glbraltar.’ Spain. Partcloudy | “Oh, 1 don’'t know.” said Cherry,[ “Oh, nothing—and if dad doesn't|were living too fast—especially thejert E. Doyle completes thirty-two |2p— ¥ —— S 2% — — | Joint Service with BACK WITHOUT ONCE WINKING, | Horts (FayaD). a.nehnu with frown. “He squinted out of [ complain, why should we worry? But|young people who were burning up |years' service as policeman. Compro- HAMBURGAMERICANLINE | Beunten; BEmss S his glasses sideways as though I were | gometimes I wonder if we're really as | their spiritual potentialities in a mad | mise reclassification bill reportecl to ACE INSTITUTE know what to make of it. Before | Goton, Ganal Zone : Part cloudy | & 8pecimen and he talked like a book. | rich as we think we are.” pursiqg of pleasure, in which their|Senate by Senator oot; hopes of A wincs aad she had climbed that tree she had et S S, I hate stodgy people. They make me| “We have enough, Cherry. Of |eiders were not far behind them At|employes high Delay comes lo re- ccountancy and caught a glimpse of the tail of a bird furious. I want to shock them. I al-|course, we should have more. Don't|every hotel every cafe. thers were don bill. Alexander T. Basiness Administration disappearing in that hole. She had | The Ameer of Afghanistan finds his eel like saying something in- | bother about that. Your father seldom |sounds of jazz music and pople hop- . Ay Siostustoncetho Tamivute are found everyehisrs had 1o idea whose tail it was, and she | chief amusement in cooking and is speaks of his affairs to me, to any |ping or whirling perpetually in|Gypsy b e i Egidon TURIOr || ST ammcptive postiions n Bosinces. Lateat. hadn't glven the matter a thought. |said to be & better chef than those in( “I've no doubt you did, my dear.” |one. But I have a wonderful faith in|antics which suggested the prancing near White House ' Health ~ofice |} focazonsadsaiiy.erening clames are availasie. All birds of her acquaintance who | his palace kitchens. Cherry lighted a cigarette and!him. Ialways have had. I believe in|of the dervish or the sinuous motions | “cleans up” home o gyDsy child. lived in holes in trees were harmless o far as she was concerned. So the unexpectedness of having her paw bitten so hard frightened her quite as much as the pain hurt her. ~ Probably she would not have been so badly frightened had she known who did it. But she didn't know, and this made it all very mys- terlous. For a week she kept away from the Old Orchard. Then curi- osity began to get the better of h By that time the hurt foot was pra: tically well. She wanted to know who had hurt it. She couldn't think much of anything else. She was still somewhat afrald to go over to the Old Orchard, but each day that fear £rew less and curiosity grew greater. She would sit on the doorstep of Farmer Brown's house and gaze over into the Old Orchard toward that tree where she had received such an unpleasant surprise. She would sit there for an hour at a time. Finally she began going over to the edge of the Old Orchard and sitting there to watch. Never once did she see any- body in or about that tree. At last she got courage enough to go down in the Old Orchard to a point whers she could see that hole in the tree, and there she would sit and sit watching that hole. “T've got to know who it was. Yes, sir, I've got to know who it was,* £he would say over and over to her- T'll never be satisfled until I So sometimes Black Pussy would spend most of the morning watehing that _hole. Sometimes she would spend half an afternoon thers. Not once did she catch so much as a limpse of anybody at that ho! She had just about made up her mind that whoever it was who had =0 frightened her couldn't be living there, but had just happened to go in there that day. And then one dull, dark afternoon just as she wi about ready to go back home she gave a last look at that hole, and there was the answer to all that had puzzled her. ~Quite filling that hole with a round, very flerce little face from which two round, yellow eyes ®lared at her angrily. Black Pusay glared back. This was the same fellow who h: 'heated her of that Mouse she had been so sure of some time before. It was Spooky the Screech Owl. She was satisfled at last. For some time she giared at Spooky, and Spooky glared back without once winking. Then Black Pussy turned and with as much dig- nity as she could walked back to Farmer Brown's house. She had jearned what she wanted to knox. and she meant to profit by th-i knowledge. In the future she would be very careful to first learn who Jived in a house before she ventured At the Bottom of the Ladder. VAKE UP EVERYBODY W TUE NEIGHBORHDOD ‘N’ MAYBE 'NEYL'L AST NICHOLA® LONGWORTH AlwAys HAD AN ACCOMPANI WHEN HE PRACTICED HI® VIOLIN LESSONS AT SIX IN THE MORNING - —By KESSLER. of the Ooled Nail, the one of which is fanatic and the other sexual. Particular instances of reckless- ness in members of the younger set had been indicated to him, and. though he had never been inclined to listen to gossip, the evidence was too definite to be lightly regarded. The habits of Miss Cherry Mohun, who had seemed to him a very splen- did sort of a creature, were not beyond _criticism. for Mrs. Lyoett, who did not share the blithe op- timism of her husband, made the definite statement that she smoked, drank, gambled, kept late hours, re- fused "to submit to the conventions and was, In short, as careless of pub- lic opinion as a chipping sparrow. And, without seeking it, David San- gree had stumbled upon evidence that at least a part of Mrs. Lycett's charges were true, for one night, returning to the Lycetts' from a motor trip to Port Jefferson, where he had con- sulted rather late with a fellow sci- entist, he had come upon & car in trouble upon the road. There was a broken fence and a damaged fender together with internal injuries to the machine too serious for immediate diagnosis. Sangree had succeeded in towing the damaged car and its oc- cupants to a garage a few miles away, where the derelicts, a man and a girl, declining his further assistance, ob- tained another car and followed him toward town at 2 in the morning. ‘The girl of the joy ride was Cherry Mohun, the man, one of the party San- gree had been at the golf club; but as the darkness had made excusable her refusal to recognize him he ma no attempt to remind her of their a; quaintance. That her companion was very slightly drunk might have escaped his notice had not the causes of the accident provoked a justifiable curjosity. Of this chance meeting Sangree had said nothing to George Lycett, nor to any one else, but had a feeling that by his silence M| Cherry Mohun was being laid under & very definite obligation. A stronger motive impelling his wish to meet the other members of the Mokun family was the knowledge. lately confirmed, that a oconsiderable part of his private fortune. adminis. tered in his absence by George Lycett, had been invested in some of Jim Mohun's companies. George Lycett, to whom had been intrusted the management of gree's business affairs during his al sence in the east. was a firm bellev- er in the star of James K. Mohun, and } had invested most, if not all, of Da- | vid Sangree's fortune, with a great) deal of his own, in the Mohun enter- prise Perhaps the Investments had mot been quite conservative, but they had the end Jus- Sweeping changes in District schools urged In report by Senator Capper of Kaneas. Policeman shoots brot officer. Senator Caraway of Arkan fights with veteran, employe of Vet- erans’ Bureau. Anti-Flirt Club or- ganized. Senators approve plaza hotel leuse. Seventy-one' taken in raid when police visit Boar's Nest. Di trict residents meet “no box-no mail requirements loyaily, only several hundred out of entire population fail- ing to place boxes at door. Justice Job Barnard dies. Alexander Grant I dies. Senator Phipps says District MOVING, PACKING & STORAGE T WATIONAL CAPITAL BTOEAGE & MOVING CO. Nerth 8845. 1seds U e ww, UNITED STATES STORAGE MOVING, PACKING, SHIFPING, PHONES: $428. rnémr, AN—_FIREPROOF—STORAGE METROPOLITAN WAREHOUSE COMPANY PERSONAL ATTENTION TO THE CARB OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS, PIANOS. AUTOMOBILES, HIGH-GRADE MERCHANDISE. 50 FLORIDA AVE. N.E. PHONE POTOMAG e82. INSPECTION INVITED 3 Teles'one Main 8260 for Bulletin T18G St., N.W., Corner 8th St., Washington COLUMBIA BERMUDA VAVONDERFUL sea gardensa rarestbeauty, raysterious crystal caves and gleaming L e g are Bt aTevat e mateo are but a attractions of these lovely ilands. Basily SCHOOL OF DRAFTING Roy C. Claflin, Pres. 14th & T Sts. Phone N. 272 Learn Drafting and enter this profession of good pay and congenial work. 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