Evening Star Newspaper, April 29, 1926, Page 40

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHI fi C.. THURSDAY. APRIL 29, 1926. MUTT AND JEFF—Skeekygeevem Is the Lion Tamers’ Secret Word for Distress. BY BUD FISHER BUT MUTT, THIS UNFORTUNATE LION TAMER SE€EMSs To HAVE SEGEN BETTER MUTT, 1T'S A STARVING) /GIVE Him MAN! He GAVE ME Some THE LION TAMERS® DOUGHNUTS | secRecT DISTRESS /[ AND COFFEE, WORD. WHAT'LL JerFe! i ILeaked AnD we sud e JGEE! Gve [RUINED THe W8\ Poor BROTHER? ~HiM SERWCE® | cennest — 2 S CAN You BeAT [ w? MUTT, J0€ SPIVIS HAD T0 MOVE EROM WIS | APARTMERT: His UPSTAIRS NEIGHBOR'S {Eountaiv PEN THEN TAKE HIM A FINGER BowL, o, BROTHGR, T'M STARVED . CAN You GWE me The Law of the Talon By Louis Tracy SYNOPSIS. Res 08. Patent Ofles. a girl whose memory was the only | fragrant remnant of a broken career. The calendar, one of those rather rude productiol roadcast by i 'y society, a month r 1l text for 1 from his fel- r text; now, in the > { i | (Continued from Yesterday's Star.) on the problem | which had been him so | L unexpected printed w | this o NT Jim Hits the T HENCE I. during a stren- uous conple of hours, that out Iyi the Hudson Bay Company was a scene of in dustry. Stores were checked d vouchers initiated until Mosqu from the first ve first Psalm. He took t | peal from child_of standing_ dis > words as veritable ap. n Grant, the delightful 1 last seen, windswept | rie in In v it was t worth while to suffer that she should | tolld. At last, hefore noon, the [be rescued. The text, the date, the | Rree men shouldered the belongings | coming of the newspaper—these things | of the o T sistant agel and | seel d to const e direc LEEHVY 1 2 he sistant agent, and | seemed to constitute u direct message | pore then, was the first real diffi- gr nged at head- | ings until he scented grouse and deer canoe, still moored to its | from He command per- | kS ol o { B and Der-| .ty of many he would be called on . day on a Scottish moe mitting of no dublety, he (fAILerNE: o tackle in the near future—what was | puws, spent the best part of un hour |, (Copsright. 1926, » decision of a |open road of duty, no matter Whither | to become of Spot? | composing a cablegram. In its final — o Of O O O et o | ‘The pair eyed each other, the one | form it read: e e A o o o T homd heet ot | doubtful, the other sedate and con-| “Lord Mountford, President, v knew moti | done, Lo act. G And, of course, the one which | bate Court, London: Regarding your T i‘-t»é;‘.fi-‘ [P ks werse A foe own mind won. | decision in Oban peerage case April ev did on the very | So, while the Indian packed the ca- You come | 28. John Bridgnorth I 1 and such quantities of Markwa, of course, simply did as he was i e Lop i & ) O { highest honors conferred on artis in Europe. An unusual feature of the ceptance is that the sketch was mer! EROYAL ACADEMY TAKES SKETCH BY AMERICAN ..} e —_— preliminai one made for preparatic | of an illustration. tween the sight of seeing Deaths of Ani | Dean Cornwell. Young Illustrator.| "y cornwell, who was born of dogs and & multiplicity of strange Queer Deaths of Animals. i 0 < a i < AR I nge | | Has Water Color Accepted by lle, Ky.. has a studio in N¢ anton is alive | objects, such us automob horsed | From the Manchester Guardian. i and is noted as an illustati from northern | veh ind the ever-changing crowds | Swallows are not infrequently killed | Institution. several magazines. He w u again before | in the streets, he was in sueh « state by golf balls. Fledgling birds get | educated at the Art Institute of stupefaction that he might have hanged by falling from their nests, By the Ascociated Pres- Chicago and has exhibited paintity been bitten with impunity by a snub-land eate thelr heads in strands| LONDON. April 20— Dean !anl illustrations at the Natior nosed Pekingese of horsehair of which the nests are well, voung American illusty Acndemy of Design and many ot} The fast-moving train put *made. Rabbits ure oceasionally run | been notably honored by the American institutes. He crown on the husky's experiences. He | over by cyclists on lonely roads at ! Academy. which has accepted : 3 many prizes in the Un simply curied up and went to sleep. | dusk. Wader hirds get trapped by ketch from his brush . Thenceforth he accept ivilization as ; strongly moored mussels or oyvsters | &ketch is of the famous though it were a blizzard—an annoy- which close suddenly, catching the Street” in Jerusalem ing (hing which hud to be endured | birds by the beak when they peck | Inasmuch as the but which would come to an end | to investigate food possibilities. Gulls | accepted only about 100 water colors | plate glass has caused the Belg some time soon. His master believed | have several times been hooked by | vearly out of the 5.000 or 9000 syndicate to jucrease the producti afterward that Spot never really re- | diving for and swallowing fish which | usually submitted, acceptance of the [to 80 per cent of the count garded himself as in decent surround. 'were being pulled in by anglers. | sketch is considered one of the ' capacity. Edmonton, for which | place a train was available. | time Spot had to submit to of a leagh It was not Indian to question t vhite man who re powerful company for the half breed or the Louis Tracy.) | By this (Continued tomorrow.) | the indignity . had ende Atideed, living claim a heap |and now on way hon d, and it'll feel 34‘\“19!‘(‘1. Will cable 1 pal handy when | sailing. John B I R of e purpose e in- iwash beached the |troduced his full name twice. The the nearest sub- | visk of mutilation was reduced thereby | day evening. In- s, one of nearly Corn rke and the » at Bison Pool ation, on the Thu: uding seven pori o mile, when can st to ze That was o trick he learned while dealing with mes- ages transmitted from point to point along the western front Luckily, the Moose Lake storekeeper difficulty was settled early next worn ing, a man keen on shooting being ready to step into Parke's shoes for the Summer, at any rate. All other colo The “David | Sy done 60 miles in a day Demand by the outside world ¢ nwostly upstream in the rivers, [ helped only by an occasional lake. The subugent at Bison Pool dis {approved strongly of Mosquite Joo even a temporary deputy at Moose Lake. He refused to appoint a substi- [ tute, referring Parke to a higher offi- | cial at Athabasca, this being the time- | | honored expedient known all over the North American continent as “‘passing the buck.” However, he made amends by supplying a couple of horses early morning, one to carry the | traveler and the other his belongings. | Thence a made trail, soon developing | {into a road, led to Athabasca, into | which small but p ssive back- voods town the valcade walked late on the Spot had to be o y over the last 40 mile s : iinured to ice and snow and rock and buld not withstand the | BISON POOL DISAPPROVED STRONGLY OF MOS. con ction of « hard road. His | A TEMPORARY DEPUTY AT MOOSE LAKE. |distre pathetic. His pride was | | hur ot yet did he realize that he | | actuality, they might |noe with due regard to the distribution | was beginning a new life. | had they known why | of weight around Jim Parke glanced | He recovered his normal good spirts, | their “boss,’ they culled him, had | around at the smiling sdlitude which | however, when he limped after his changed his ind so quickly One | had given him a home during nearly { master into the spacious hall of a | minute, while the Indian w ossing | five years. Existence had not been al- | hotel, the gathering ground nightly | the threshold of the hut, Jim together unhappy there. A man had | of nearly every man in the place, and | was all for ignoring the existence of | to fight to live, but the effort an enterprising chow, seeing hi: (‘flnmI the Hon. Johp Bridgnorth Panton, yet | was worth while. Would he ever |dition dashed forward to an e vie- | the next, when Markwa retreated, he | see Moose Lake again? It was|tory. Parke had some difficulty in| was even more detinitely committed hard to say. He had bidden what |rescuing the chow alive, and forthwith | to the tribulations which unquestion- ! seemed to be an eternal farewell ! refused offers for Spot rising from $5 ! ably awaited the return of his other to scenes far dearer, vet the whirligig [to $30. It might have been an in =elf to civilized of time was bringing him back to |stance of sound common sense had he | And why w Kimply because, | them. Perhaps it might be so with |sold the dog then to some one who in the effort ollect his wits after |the far-flung territory of northern|would treat him well, but common having scared away the Siwash with | Alberta, It had given him sanctuary |sense was not, in the free speech of Macbeth’s despairing he had turn- (once. It might be willing to shelter | the Northwest, “Parke’'s long suit.” | ed to glance at a eslendar hanging on | him a second time. Spot and he had started together on a | the wall merely to werify the date and He stepped into the canoe after a |strange quest; they might even end make sure that there still was time to |farewell handshake with Mosquito Joe, |together; whatever nappened, they take effective action in behalf of that [and was sitting on his heels in the | would not be separated by barter. which he valued far more than his |stern, paddle in hand, when the dog | The telegraph office was closed for threatened inheritance—the happiness | sprang in after him. the night, but that did not mll!erb Ioyal Academy border line of have scoffed ‘The open season is on for this remarkable cracker! é)‘ Comparative values of everyday foods - AP rw (St This solves the candy problem Do your children ever tease for candy? Most Porterhouse Steak White Bread Eggs HE sun rides high again. The tang of spring brings us out o’ doors. The keen air brings the pleasant pangs of hunger. 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