Evening Star Newspaper, February 19, 1928, Page 87

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THE SUNDAY STOR IES SPORTS GAMES “Educating Patricia” BY CORNELIA H. MILLER Patricia Hollingshead. a student of M RKtanhope's School, is secretary of her class: her frend. Mary Harmis, s treasure Toommate. Lowise Davia 18 Viee preside of the Republic. the school governing 3nd aleo captain of the First Junior basket Ball feam. ther heinc wix teams which are 10 play off matches for the championship. in the last installment of the siory Patricia_went 1o a foot ball game at New n Through . her {riend. body. ! holdups. The passing cars only moved the faster. “How utterly stupid of you, Bunny," said Anne, in sugary tones, delighted to avenge some of the earlier glares and | “Let's start walking to the nearest | garage,” suggested Patricia, and as it k. chaperon. | chagin_of | :;: ‘:}'d';‘: :m‘flrflr‘m‘d. oue of the ieac Patricia Finds Herself in Hot Water. CHAPTER XV. “Wasn't it an exciting game, Miss Overwood?” remarked Patricia, with an effort to appear unconcerned. *] WISH YOU HAD NEVER COME.” RETURNED BUNNY THROUGH HIS TEETH. -V Overwood, ! Priefly. with further close inzpection of Patricia and her party. “May I present my friends?” went on Patricia, with what equanimity she was able 10 summon. i “Patricia, where is your chaperon?” Miss Overwood. “Well—er—a—" “We have none, Miss Overwood.” in- ferposed Anne, “and it is all my fault Please don't blame Patricia because she had nothing to do with it and has been terribly upset about it. She said ahs was on her honor and all. Please don't get her into trouble for it. Put all the blame on me,” she end>d, mag- nanimously. } “I cannot understand how this came | @bout. You left the school with Miss Pemberton. did you not, Patricia?” “Yes Miss Overwood,. and then I mst Anne in New York and she had a teacher with her.” “And I told them all that a friend of | mother’s was meeting us in New Haven ' to be with us the rest of the time,” put in Anne, whose code of honor had an her own mak-: ':IX is most fortunate that I dis-| covered you, upon myself to see that you return school safely this evening. We shall start at once.” “1 was supposed to stay over night with Anne” said Patricia, meekly. Indeed, you will do nothing of the sort. You will return with me at once. | I shall explain to my freinds that duty has interfered with pleasure.” She turned to the group of sober-minded, middle-aged persons who were her com- panions and had stood patiently a few steps below, awaiting the close of the eslioguy. darn shame” an- unny, glaring uncompromis- ingly at Anne. “Now you've and gotten Pat in trouble all for nothing. You never did have any sense, Anne” “Thanks” laughed Anne. “Something tells me that we shall have a rather back to New York I om | glimpse of the canal which Washington w < |surveyed. George Washington selected | sorry I got you into this trouble, Pat Bonestly 1 am.” “Think she’ll Jet us drive you back o catch the train in New York?” asked Bunny. “Here she comes. T'll inquire.” He put his proposal with that smile that siways won immediate sympathy, | and Miss Overwood after a momemt's hesitation, relented. To his suggestion that they go o his fraternity house for tes she maintained adamant refusal, however. They scrambled down the rows of benches, now vacant, the crowds hav- ing dispersed during their argument Bunny offered a gallant arm 10 Miss Overwood. If a little diplomatic atten- tion was W help Patricia’s cause he meant it 0 be forthcoming. With & courtesy that was mest shone he led the party o his car 2nd ushered them in with a flourish, ensooncing Miss Overwood tenderly in & corner of the wnneay, while he tend- ered Anne s viclous little shove with his knee He manipulated the car ingenious through the trafic With one b puinting out objects of interest with 1he other, maintaining a slow, eve progress which he intended W be S0tk ing w Miss Overwood In fact, every- tiing was very smooth and soothing for @ time, but oply for & tme. A VICWUEpohicy Church, the next stop. Pohick, | Burgesses. After the Revolution all o had Samingly vengquished the ' p. e cnureh of Mount Vernon parish, Vestries, under the laws of the Btate, - dreariness of the day. They traveled Woward the torches that lit e sky with their vari-colored flames As they approached the little village of Paddingon Bunny turned W clsim some vivid historical tele oon- necwd with s low, slope-roofed farm- rlier Jiouse @ tale ot e Wo elosely verified, | has much of the graclous dignity of | bt effective none the less. The eyes of el were locusd on the house when tiere was u gringing jolt and the car ceme W & sudden standsull in the mid- ale of the Youd, & goud three miles from Paddinguon, U nearest vilag Why, whatever was that” exclaimed Mue Overwod, stra.ghvening her he! which ned been buried w the back ol her hewd Bunny, his fae & study in complete Jiseomfiture, climbed oul wovelw his eer from &l wngles, eriremities of mis person protruding | st Mount Vernon, the records go back | his | o 1732, the year George Washington he from beneath the front wheeis voice issued forth, mournful end muf- fied “Oh, gosh! We've Lit one of thuse yocks that they merk with and it hes ripped 8 big hole in the crank omse “BLst-st,” remarked Miss Overwood | son, who was o receive 1,300 pounds of | Beiptully Mayle we can hall @ W ohelp .’ offered Juck phssing car stationing Bimself in the middie of the roed W |some four churches wid his salary was | Ing wive his handkerchie! wildly Bul brotnerly 1ellowsiip among mo torists hao been desiruyed by heumelnnnun'i‘:i | ito prove what hunger will do to the 7. STAR, WASHI GTON, D. €. FEBRUARY 19, 1928 -PART %4e BOYS and G which beset the ea:ly pilgrims—at least seel to them. sfi:"‘gomineu, I wish I had worn walk- ing shoes,” ed Anne. “These high heels are too tenrible.” E “I wish you had never come,” Te- turned Bunny through his teeth. “My dear Mr. Parsons, aren't you for- ‘getdng your erstwhile polish, just a | little?” No sign of a garage presented itself until they reached Paddington, cold, { weary and hungry, with spirits com- { pletely depressed. Nor was any great | cheer forthcoming even then. Therc | was only one mechanic in the menage | of the village garage and he had taken | the service car and gone to the foot | ball game. No doubt he was now cheer- ily celebrating the Yale victory. | “Well, let’s at least get somcthing to eat,” said Jack. “Then we can put Miss ! Overwood and the girls on the train fo | New York and we’ll stay here until we | can persuade some one to go out and | tow the car in." Something in his face scemed to indicate that it would accord him great satisfaction to speed the parting guests on their way, though not rejoicing. “Where can we eat, Bill?" he demanded of the grimy executive in charge of the garage. “Wa-al, there ain't no place in par- ticular as I know of,” was the helpful reply. “Then again you mought get a little snack at the hot dog wagon yon- der.” He indicated vaguely with & soiled thumb. | “What dumbbell!” ejaculated Anne. “Come on, let's go and find it for our- | | selves. T am hungry enough to eat hot | | dogs with relish.” “What might hot dogs be, may I/ ask?” inquired Miss Overwood. But th: suffering woman was soon to find her- self clinging to a difficult seat on the step of the wagon eating this new sandwich, plentifully garnished with onion, with great relish, which only goes most fastidious. In fact, though no one was roused to keep count, she ate three. ‘Their spirits somewhat revived by | hot coffee which the menu included, | they walked to the raflroad station and | found that they had missed their train. | There would be another in 90 minutes. | Quite numbed to hardship by this time, the girls curled themselves on the hard wooden benches of the waiting room and promptly went to sleep, while Miss | right. The unfortunate Bunny sat in| the corner with Jack's feet elevated to | receive the warmth of the stove, where | they smoked innumerable cigarettes. It | was a quite cozy and domestic scene. | The train was late, as might have ! forget their guardian, on a train packed Japan. to more than its capacity with noisy , French army during the World War a- | difficulty s | an aviator, and while there married a known To them were born two mammal. while Patricia and Anne navigated the | children, one of whom is the boy mak- d}cnonuyn. lof seemed the most plausible suggestion vet offered, they proceeded to do so. It had grown quite dark and a cold wind pursued the procession, which struggled on in the face of hardship equal to that been expected, and it was with barely | boys at last put two sleepy girls, not to foot ball enthusiasts. With seat was found for Miss Overwood, trip precariously on two opposite arms, e in immediate danger of being hurled to | the floor by the crowds that surudi happily up and down the alsle. “I don't see how they can be so light- hearted,” 'fl'oll‘led Patricia. “I feel that 1 have suffered all that any one woman can and still live, and goodness knows what is going to happen to me when I get back. It will all depend on how | good a sport Miss Overwood is. Thank heaven, I have worked hard on my Latin translations. Maybe that will help me.” “She really seems to be quite a good sport,” said Anne, encouragingly. “Hon- estly, Pat, I am awfully sorry I got vou into this mess. I never thought that everything under the shining heavens would happen on one and the samc day. Of course, 1 shall probably in- dulge in a peck of trouble myself.” | “Do you know it is quite funny when | ou stop to think of it. Every single hing that could possibly happen cer- tainly did.” Patricia managed a hearty laugh and felt better. Upon their arrival in New York, Miss Overwood insisted upon conveying Anne to the door of her school, where she left her to solve her own problems. Then once more they resumed their travels and finally arrived at Hoxing at an early hour of the morning. After some exertion they summoned Alfred, the night watchman, to let them in, and Patricia stole stealthily to her room. “What happened? Why did you come back tonight?" asked Louise, sleepily. “I thought you were staying in New | York for the night.” “Plenty happened and plenty more | is going to,” groaned Patricia. | Floating Gardens. NATURE and man work together with uncommon accord in form- ing the celebrated “floating gardens” of the lakes of Chalco and Xochimilco, near the City of Mexico. An American naturalist who has visited them and found them a paradise tells how they | grow. Floating clumps of entangled | peat, moss, rushes and grass are caught. | combined and anchored by stakes or | | their highly seasoned repast and the | long saplings of willows and poplars, which are driven into the muddy bot- tom. where they soon take root. Fertile | mud is then ladied up and heaped on the float until a real island is formed. | which is_quickly transformed into a garden where are grown flowers, mel- ons, gourds and other kinds of prod- uce, which are daily carried to market | | Overwood sternly sat guard, bolt up- through a canal leading into the city. ‘There are hundreds of such gardens on the lakes. Bnror;aée >l{e1d From Boy. | Because his mother is French, the ap- | plication for the inhecritance of his fa- | concealed sighs of relief that the two ther's title has not been granted the son | of the late Baron Kiyotake Shigeno of Baron Shigeno served in the Prench girl. ing the application. IRLS PAGE A Nature Puzzle 1 i o Hidden in_this picture is an animal, in biology as a carniverous (Better look that up in the ! with three letters, and these letters are | ‘There are many species | also hidden in the puzzle. l Europe. them down as you find them. Then jLoreNdgejlloore His nams consists of two words. each assemble in order. Find t! And just in case you shouldn't get them all, we're telling you what the his family both in America and animal. then find the letters and write animal is elsewhere in this page! A Visit to the Haunts and Homes of the Boy, George Washington BY LAURA THORNBOROUGH. OW many We: ians have visited the pilgrims who marched on Mount Vernon during 1927, | how many took an extra day to visit the | farm where George was born, where young George spent his childhood, the home where his mother spent the last daysof her life, the stately mansion where his sister went as a bride, the church with which W n_ was first associated as a vestryman? All are within comfortable motoring distance of the National Capital and can be seen within a single day Very little is really known of the childhood of the man whose birthday is observed February 22 throughout the length and breadth of the land, an ob- servance that began during the lifetime of the first President of the United States of America. Mount Vernon is rightly associated with ‘Washington, yet young George was 16 when he went to Mount Vernon to live with his half-brother, Lawrence Wash- |ington, from whom he inherited this {estatc on the Potomac at the latter’s | death in 1752, Since the writer first visited Mount ‘V:‘nlmnnnchndmhunwdzlgnm- | m pligrimage to this national shrine, {but only last year did she discover the | many historic spots connected with the youthful Washington. On the north side of M street, be- tween Thirtieth and Thirty-firs: streets is & small stucco house of yellow tucked away between business houses. It bears | a large sign proclaiming “Slate and Tile | Roofers” and a smaller sign reading | “George Washington’s headquarters wvhile surveying Washington 1791." |From the Key Bridge one catches a Surve ithe route and was first president of | the old “Potomack Canal Company.” {In his will he left two bequests to | education, one being the honds he {owned in this company. Looking eastward from Key Bridge ithe Lincoln Memorial and Washington Monument give forth their Through Fort Myer and tor, the latter the home of George | Washington Parke Custis, step-grand- son of Warhington, before it came into | the possession of Robert E. Lee, who | married Miss Custis. The first stop is at Christ's Church, Alexandria, of interest historically and {architecturally. There is a well kept {air about the church, the grounds and polished until it al-|the graveyard, and a fresh coat of | ves a spick-and- | interior eminently | white paint within |span look to an satistying. ‘There is a gallery around three sides, { but on the side are the pews of George | Washington and Robert E. Lee, old family pews with seats on three nau;Alemum as the church of that jand & wooden door on the alsle. Not| only did Washington have a at | | Christ’s Church, but he was a vestry- |man st a time when the vestrymen were elected Lo office by the people and were the ruling men of the parish. | Washington was @!so a vestryman of {is perhaps more intimately connected with the riligious life of Washington {than the better known Christ’s Church. | Pohick Church is & substantial look- de- | ing brick structure with stone dressings built in the Georglan style, surrounded by u well kept graveyard. The interjor | Christ’s Church | George Washington was vestryman of Pobick and member of the buflding | commitiee, und it was due o his fn- | fluence that the church was located I there The first church was a smaller {frame bullding situated 2 miles nearer fGunston Hall on the south gide of Po- | hick Run. Pohick was also the parish church of George Mason of Gunston Hall, celebrated authior of the Bill of | Rights of Virginia. It was restored in ith ke nether | 1874, but in the old vestry book, now (in 1782 and the church seems to have | was born. | Augustine Washington, of father thelr sections | George, was elected vestryman in 1735, | rector | The first lay reader in the parish | electea by the vestry was Joseph John- | Whiaces | omce the first minister rovided he did his duty in his Krv Lawrence de Bulls was He hed charge of {8000 pounds of Whecen, clear of ware- pouse charges, bub there was 8 proviso je. past Arfing- | new pews in the center, | the parish was divided by cutting off | A CHERRY TREE ON THE FAR weather, or otherwise, from filling his | appointments an amount of tobacco | should be deducted from his salary in | due proportion. In 1763 George Washington and George Willlam Fairfax were appointed church wardens of Pohick Church, ‘Truro Parish, Pairfax County. In 1764 portion of Truro and creating Fair- i'.x Parish, with Christ Church at parish, This was done by an act of the General Assembly. George Washington | became s vestryman in both parishes | by the vote of the frecholders and | householders. Washington was elected | vestryman by al votes, just as he | was elected to U Virginia House of | were dissolved. Washington took an |active interest In Pohick Church untl about 1785, and his pastor, Rev. Lee Massey, said of him: "I never knew {80 constant an attendant at church as Washington " When_plans for & new church in Truro Parish were drawn in 1760, George Mason wanted the church built | | on the old site, but Washington made & | survey of the parish snd @ map show- { g the residences of all the parishion- | jers. He presented it o the vestry and | the present site was agreed on.” The | butlding committee appointed by the | vestry contained * some Interesting (numes; George Washington, CGeorge | William Fairfax, George Mason, Daniel McCarty snd Edward Payne. l Washington resigned from the vestry lost its hold on the people, as little was ard of it for number of years, It {15 said that during this interval Rev Mason Locke Weems was for & time 1t The same Weems wrole a lite | 0f Washington, telling the story of the | eherry tree ‘The drive is a scenic delight with | the yolling hills of Virginia to the right and views of the lower Potomac o the left. Fredericksburg is & charm- ity of 7,000 inhabitants, and it is proud that it has interesting The Juetly bpots pocociaied with Washington epeated st if e minister was prevented by licnic of vy Bell, mother of George | M WHERE GEORGE WASHING. TON SPENT HIS BOYHOOD. and second wife of Augustine Washing- ton, is a modest two-story frame struc- ture painted yellow. It has a cozy, homelike interior, and was Mrs. Wash- ington’s home from 1775 to 1789. Mrs. Washington was a very inde- pendent woman, insisting on llving alone in that house instead of at Mount Vernon with her son George or at Kenmore with her daughter Betty. “Come out into the garden and I'll show you Kenmore,” sald a caretaker. “There, through the trees, that's the back you see. The house faces on the next block. But Betty—Mrs. Lewls she was—had made a trail through the little patch of woods so her mother would "have a short cut and wouldn't mother. in s of PFredericksbu before the marbl of Mary Ball, HOUSE ON FERRY FARM, WASHINGTON. surveyor, lald out CHILDHOOD HOME THE OLD HOME IS GONE. | used to potter around in and it was!tion Rock, her favorite here she recelved Gen. Lafayette.” Kenmore, bullt in 1752, the home to which Col. Fielding Lewis took George's sister Betty as a bride, is In striking contrast to the modest home of the A stately brick structure set clous grounds, it is now owned | by the Kenmore Assoclation, organized | to save it from destruction. Washington, drive and also designed the stucco work, which was done by Hessian rrlmnrrl. Kenmore has a charm of ts own. The next visit was to the outskirts to stand reverently obelisk in memory the first monument erected to A woman by woman. stands in no cemetery, but on the spot George the A Motor Trip From the National Capital, Taking in the Places Where Young Washington Lived. \Vorkcd and p]ayed—Freder;cksbul’g. Ferry Farm. pflhick Cl’lutc}l and é]exfl!\drl’a. OF GEORGE retreat for reading, prayer and meditation. It is a lovely spot, overlooking the roliing | valleys of Virginia with the Blue Ridge somewhere off in the distance. The simple inscription reads: “Mary the Mother of Washington.” She died 1789 at the age of 83. Her husband, Augustine, died in 1743, leaving her with five children to raise—George, the eldest, being 11 at the time. Many historic spots in_Fredericks- burg draw the visitors—St. George's Church and the church yard where lie buried Willlam Paul, brother of Jahn Paul Jones, and John Dandridge. Martha Washington's father; the law office of President James Monroe: the old slave box: the sentry box, from which a fine view is obtained of Ferry Farm, where Qeorge Washington's child- Mary Ball had selected near Medita- | hood and early youth were spent. ‘S OF PETER PEN. 0. TRHOSE. WHO HAVE JUST STARTED, 1S S PETER. PEN, A GHOOD NATURED LITTLE IMP WHO CLIMBS OUT OF MY BOTILE QF IN. PACH DAY AMD POUT TREST 1IDEAS INTO MY HWEAD HE 15 COMDUCTING A TOUR. TO THE LAMD OF JUST <SPOSINT ANMD HAS FIVE BOVS AMD (IRLS AS GUES IS MAGC CARbE T THE SORSEHINE CoOLDIERS WALUE (SO EL) THRO THE. O 2430 THE STORA AAS PASSE O vy S OMYy Nt NICHOLS —~ & ING SNARL OF THE BAD LAND O® 1t is a short drive through Predericks- | burg, acrcss the Rappahannock River down to Ferry Farm, owned by J. B. { Colbert. The grounds are spacious and well kept, su the new manor house with its modern con- veniences built on the site of the old | home where lived young George, his sister Betty and their mother Mary, not to mention the older half-brothers, | Lawrence and Augustine, and younger children coming aon. | Only one of the old buildings was still standing, so Mr. Colbert says. He point- is indicated by qualifying words. DE- LATE CULTAS is “very Bad,” and HIYU DELATE CULTAS is very, very bad indeed—in fact, about as bad as you can indicate in Chinook unless the speaker goes on and refers to some known thing, the badness of which is | simply overwhelming. The word is used to mean anything evil or undesirable, such as not brave, not strong, or not good in any way. If used as a pre! to the word COOLEY, which by itsel! means “Travel” or “Run,” the meaning changes and the two words mean a Pleasure Trip. This is one of the queer double meanings found all through Chinook, which make it hard to learn until one actually talks it. Then it is |8 ing how the various meanings of | the various words seem to drop right in | where they belong, with nothing else to i take thelr places. OKE OKE CULTAS meaning “That !is_bad,” and CULTAS NIKA TU TUM can mean “I feel badly,” or am sorrv.” “I feel blue,” Posers. Scmetimes Winter hours seem lon; than Summer . because we can’ be outside quite so much and there aren’t so many things to do. Therefore Winter s the best time of the year for posers. 1. Give the nationality of the 1, lowing men: Glad: fayette. Brutus, T n. 2. Tell in hat art—Iliterature, painting, sculpture or music—each of the following was noted: Liszt, Phidias, Dickens. Dumas, Rembrandt, Beetho- ven. 3. What is a rectangle? 4. What is the meaning of petrify? Ir what century cdid Napoiecn 5. die? 6. Where is Siberia? For what does D. D. S. after a man’s name stand? 8. What city is the capital of Peru? Al 1. English, German, ¥ L . German, French, Roman, Russian, Norwegian. 2. Music, scuip- ture, literature, literature, painting. ymusic. 3. A polygon having four sides and four right angles. 4. To !" Tongue Thwisters. Is your tongue limber? You certainly will have to lousen it up to twist around the tongue-twisters below. Each word begins with the same letter in each sentence and you are to say them as quickly as possible withou: stumbling. Shirley saw several stupid students sewing some short silk sweaters. Poor Peggy purchased pratty pigtures profitably. © Carl cleverly caught Clarence’s cat consuming Clara’s clear cool cream. Wily Willy wanted whitewashed walls where weod would work. Ten trusty Turks turned toward the terrible tent together. Beautiful Betty baked bread but bought biscuiis. 3 | Peter pasted purple paper pads, piling piaces picturesquely. Gertrude grew gray giving greedy Gladys greetings. & ed to the one-room office where young | | George first set himself up in business | as & surveyor. In order to protect this { historic bullding, the first business office {of the first President of the United | States, the present owner of Ferry Farm | had caused a tin roof to be built above and beyond the old board roof. is one of 1 day. was probably the author of the dollar story. At the age of 14, while attending school in Fredericksburg. taught by the French scholar, James Marye, George wrote his famous rules of conduct. The good professor, it now seems. taught civility and manners along with spell- ! ing and mathematics. | Not far from Predericksburg. a short distance from the main highway, s Aquia Church, notable for its antiquity in & region of famous old churches. Aquia Church, Stafford County, was, according to the historian. the mother church of Truro Parish before the form- ing of Prince Willlam County in 1730 It is of especial interest because of its quaint interior and remarkable three-tiered pulpit. The announcements were made from the first, the lesson read from the second by the lay reader. but only the preacher was allowed to occupy the third and highest pulp The old church was burned and th | new one built about 1757, when John Moncure was minister. About a century Iater it was restored. mainly by the descendants of Moncure. During the ride -home the writer thought of the youthful George, pour- ing over his coprbook maxims and put- ting them Into datly practice. The boy George, remembering to strive not with | his superiors in argument. gave up his cherished desire to go into the Navy at the request of his mother. A year later. when only 16, he got his first real tob, surveying the estate of Lord Fairfax, and a mans job it was, for much of the estate was in forest, untraveled and un- marked. But o tharough was the work of the 16-year-old surveyur, so reliable were his maps and measurements, that they have been accepted ever since and are about the only correct ones dating back to that period. A visit to the early homes and haunts of George Washington makes one feel the humanness of the man and the of the bay. onee LR L JUST SPOSIN CAUSED A TERQIBLE. STORM TO APPEAR. WHICH CAUSED OUR TRAVELERS TO BE DRIETR D! e s \* OFF couvase. \ . SNARL DOES'NOT WANT PeTen Pen AND H\S GLUESTS TO RBACH THE LAND QF | e = How about a time limit on riddles?> We'll give you two minutes each on these, and no fair looking at the answers, tongue frequently v 1. What you without saying a word? Po:'L’ What great virtue has the North le? 3. When is it hard to get g h out of your pocket? S 4 4. What is it that you can T giving it to somedody else? 5. Why is the letter S like a sew- ing machine? Answers. 1. The tongue i your shoe. fce. 3. When 4. Your word § needles needless. 2. Just- s ticking there. Because it makes Painting With Wood. JT s teported in Alace an artist named Spindler makes pictures with wood alone. Using woods in the nat- ural color. he constructs pictures of great besuty. Each picture is made from & sketch. Then. with infnite patience and care. the artist cuts the veneer and glues it t0 a backing and then welds it all in a Since the artist never but wood in its natural 10 know a great deal about trees In workshop he has preces of wood found in Europe and from other countries. The uses anything color, he has y. for example. a farmer tald that he had a tree for him to It was an oak that had d for centuries and th blue-black. The ar ted with the color, paid the farmer $130 o the tree and $W mare to get 1t to his house. With the various woods, ed. the artist achieves pe! He pictures clouds, rain, \ curtains—in short. anything and ev- erything that an artist can pamnt with plame Some of his ven * him hours of study and of St some of it is as as a hair Spindler has wood of évery shade of yellow, brown, red. black and white He has almost all the various shades of green also, but he finds the Nues Rard to get. The Hidden Animal. The animal hidden in the pussle picture 1 & RED FOX > Ths s BEAM, TaE S CAPTAIN OF THE. ENvTQLT BN 1 WING GUFrAW 1O RESCOE JUST SPOSIN' AND WILL DO AL L IN W DoweR. TO 2TOP THEM, | PETEQ PEN AND S GALLANMT LITTLE. BaND® Branm TE US THAT e, AQE \ooNY REACH LA LoV DG | \ieoes WEL L | MOPR 1Y Wikt DonT Noo®

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