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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 27, MUTT AND JEFF—They Encounter Some Souvenir Collecting Friends in Buf falo. o s SR By BUD FISHER. JERE, THIS TOUR oF THE f & AND WHEN THAT . oA UNITED STATES MAKes me | Hll PLUMP BRUNETTE R s Ji::é ng . :«u C v T ' cALLED Me . i : WHew T Ger Back horae . Ji TALL BLowves || ‘AvceLeace T T vl f Thors by cont: il = cANT Seem I'LL GET WRITERS SWARM AROUND |l wenT cRA2y § 0 ° XNFe AND WOl ) Beaunies tuoutd ® GUIDE T cRAMP PenninG | Me? x sune JH AND Asken Her F M-t @ THose Twie Love notes T e T HAD A MIFTY ™ HAvE A HAie TaKen THe e GIRLS GOT A GRLS T've Met! i i rime 1N PeAcH-MELBA T ;| PROPELLOR oOFF (Continued from . make her become friends with White i s # BuEFALO! FoR DesseRT! i\ OUR PLANE IF e : Iver in his ears was sounding A : ; {1 seventy Five © | T HADN'T Been/ One other ex ot similar sharp and nervous snarl. She 4 i g i 2 i, = * Mature was his. On the way to town, | ha or forgiven him the chicken- § g S = ELOE - 3 i : | LookING. THey Salton: at ) the| Willne episode (andipsraistantly Kera E . > 2 > =0 g A : INSISTED o o three dogs that |to the belief that his Intentions were m et i ¥ z B - HAUING A H practice of rushing out upon | bad. She found him guilty before ' : - d sl :\ SoLvenR ofF I him when he went by, Knowing his [ the nct, and treated him accordingly i A : : 1 : Ea = ‘ deadly h the master [ She became a pest o him, ke a po- . - X ] ¥ : il o i & PLAN 1 g ing upon | licem following him around the 5 a i ;- 7 E E he must [stable and the grounds, and if he even not fight. As a result, having learned {80 much as glanced curiously at a the lesson well, White Fang was hard | pigeon or chicken bursting into an put whenever he d the cross-|ontery of indignation and wrath. His Toads saloon. After the first rush, [favorite way of ignoring her was to . his snarl kept the three |lic down, with his head on his fore- flogs at a distance, but they trailed [paws, and pretend sleep. This always long behind, velping and bickering | dumfounded and silenced her. 1 insulting him. This endured for{ \vitn the exception of Collie, time. The men-at the saloon | yhings went well with White e poze o Lo Attack | fo had learncd control and poise Ked th on him. The ||\‘.nhr Lo Wknew o R any Il wncte 2 tnas b SI67 | statdness ana- calmness and Philo- ‘hite Fang, | Sophic tolerance. He no longer liv s ey re Fang. |in a_hostile environment. Danger and hur ath did not lurk aster, and he look- i 3 Then he looked back | CVerywhere g In time the lhumor came into his eyes. He had|longest day never played White Fang | contain himself no longer, when he | whined softly. The master talked to | French government had required Nantstioningls s i b R £ r and | learned to laug out. His was the galt of the wolf, |sprang in front of the horse and|him gently but seriously, and he |special permits for each call of u Ve Archie D. Engel ;i aded | Likewise he rned to romp with | smooth, tireless and effortless, and | barked savagely and warningly. cocked his ears and listened With | German craft at Cherbourg. - 2 = T e S enen0ssuan s A SeEe s e R | sassransansianasann: | the master, to be tumbled down and | at the end of 50 miles he would come| Though he” often tried to bark | painful intentness. YouR 5 | roliec and be the victim of in-|in jauntily ahead of the horse. thereafter, and the master encour-| “That's all right, old fellow, Jou § OPTOMETRISI, OPTICIAN 4 tricks. In return| It was in connection with the rid- [ aged him, he succeeded only once, and | just run along home,” ran the talk. Gives Luncheon Now Located at He missed the snow without being | h 4 bristling and growl- | ing that White Fang achieved one |then it was not in the master's pres- | “Go home and tell them what's hap- SR L f?r Calles. 615 15th St. N.W. aware of it. “An undul ne Sum- fously, and clipping his|other mode of expression—remark- |ence. A scamper, across the pasture, [ pened to me. Home with you, you| BERLIN, August 27. — President- Phone Mamn 7105 mer would have heen his thought had | teeth together in snaps that had all |able in that he did it but twice in all |a jackrabbit rising suddenly under t along elect Calles of Mexico was tendered a vy . he | the : But | his life. The first time occurred when | the horse's feet, a violent sheer, a onti luncheon Monday by Foreign Min- | | Formerly with Those snaps | the master was trying to teach a spir- | stumble, a fall to earth and a broken ister Stresemann. Among the guests Q . Roe Fulkerson on the empty | ited thoroughbred the method of |leg for the master were the cause of D wese Chancetion Marx, membars of end of such a romp, when | opening and closing gates without | it. White Fang sprang in a rage at Shi - | the cabinet, parliamentary leaders, ind cuff and snap and snarl|the rider's dismounting. Time and |the throat of the offending horse, but Germap Ships Go to France. |ieil known financiers and industrial: w fast and furious, they would |again and many times he ranged the [ was checked by the master's voice. NEW YORK. August ~—The Ham- | ists. Ew Bran tore 1 { break off suddenly and stand several | horse up to the gate in the effort to “Home! Go home!"” the master com- burg-American L’""] fllm’rllm‘fidv ,\Pfiir; smmsS— = = —— e . Bowever, was to make him un- | feet apart, glaring at each other. | close it, and each time the horse be- | manded, when he had ascertained his | terday that inagmuch as the Frenc 922 14th St. SITE casy and restless withont his know- And then, just as suddenly, like the |came frightened and backed and |injury. port of Cherbourg had been thrown FRANXLIN SQ ing what was the matter, sun rising on a stormy sea, -y | plunged away. It grew more nervous | White Fang was disinclined to de- |open to German vessels for the first lt’s a Scxence S ey ery | Would begin to laugh. s w and excited every moment. When it [sert him. The master thought of |timc since the World War broke out it i e e oy ¢ ¢ 2 culminate w S *s | reared the master put the spurs to it [ writing a note, but searched his pock- | 10 years ago, the passenger ships 5 ing i denion . vond hi - - ay e Elasses ae noc matters left to ROl S bWnE HL Al Gid oing around Whit and made it drop its forclegs back to |ets vainly for pencil and paper.| Albert Ballin and Deutschland here- RREES (Oplovatervisuar otan mhinaea e pTionine CEe aroanine oty earth, whereupon it would begin | Again he commanded White Fang to |after would make Cherbours a regu- which we're complets masters. The word | o oo BISE Ve TNEUIT VAR B kicking with its hind leks. White | go home. {lar port of call on eastern and west- “Just a Real Good Car”’ stores to serve you. valiey, and i) ver a third way. He had | But nobody else ever romped with [ Fang watched the performance with | The latter regarded him wistfully. |ern voyages g Claflin Optical Co, 1514 G st fr duks did not |, sumceptible tolthe Tavghs | White Eang. 1H not permit it. | increasing anxiety until he could |started away, then returned and| Since the treaty of Versailles the | ZZZZZZIIIIIIZTZ7Z777777777775777 plical 0. Ciey Club Bidg. 1. B 5 S AUER" I He stood on his dignity, and when | o ———————————— e i » gods. aughter had af- | 5 . L ror e e oo naughter had af- | they attempted it his warning snarl With rase. But he qid net |and bristling mane were anything but have it in him to be angry with the | Playful. That he allowed the master | | 1ove master, and when that god elect- | these Tibe; BYASETOEeESONNCE (e The months came and went. There | ed to laugh at him in a good-natured, | #hould be a common dog, loving here A ot ol s v b v e |and loving there, everybody's prop- 2 - Z|erty for a romp and good time. He ind hite Fang lived o e e pricking and st 1 White Eanelixed lithe pricking o To [loved with single heart and refused the love. He could 1 e angry; e master went out on horseback e , as | had to do s At first Be was [a great deal, and to sccompany him v v, and he | dignified, and aster laushed the | was one of White Fang's chief duties - planted in Then he tried to be more |in life. In the thland he had evi- A . B °d, and the master laughed |denced his fealty by toiling in the . = - o The Call of Kind. In the end the | harness; but there were no sleds in - | the outhland, nor did dogs pack urdens on their backs. So he ren- dered fealty in the new way, by run- PINDLER G Corby’s Mother’ Bread lean and Press e finer flavored because Mer's Suits, 95 our Scientific Dough — Gloves, 5¢ and 10c A Lo o ) ' Mixing Process develops all the glufen ~ master builder of tissue and ) TR Engineering for Service WITH the twang of a clock- unknown and adapt the known spring, carried over a short in Science. They bring the stretch of wire one June day in thoroughness of specialists to the 18735, came a discovery that was tasks of construction, operation, to be of incalculable value to management. Their common, mankind. On that day the tele- objective is an improved service phone was born, and a new wheteby man may substitute his vocation came into being, voice for his physical presence the profession of telephone in distant places. e CRgueEEIng. Engineered and not hap- Today, 49 years later, a host hazard effort has brought the of men, successors of Bell and triumphs that mark advances in his single assistant, are applying the convenience of the telephone. their trained abilities to the Because of this effort there is complex problems of meeting a communion of communities the nation’s demand for tele- wvithout which America, as we phone service. They explore the know it, could not exist. NS 648 e L PR €O R HD LB 42 L BORE S b R R 88 PR 6 E SR80 ¥\ THE CHESAPEAKE AND POTOMAC TELEPHONE CO. Bell System = ~ ' b : Baking Compeay, 1se. One Policy ~+ One System Universal Service ~ Definitely _richer in Nourishment and Ener