Evening Star Newspaper, August 28, 1929, Page 32

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D. C., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 28, I DONT KNOW EXACTLY YET, BUT IT LOOKS LIKE A g;m 3 GUARD PATROL! YES IT IS, AV SHES CoMING THIS WAY FAsT! WE'RE INSIDE TH' 12=MILE LT 32 THE EVENING gfi-—— ] POTTA LIFE! WOTTA LIFE! | | |THE_CHEERFUL CHERUB My life’s contaihed some hairbreadth escapes But when they passed I enjoyed them immensely. I wouldit want just . fl plucid content— | T Successful living is livin ‘l s Al Now Feels Safer. STAR, WASHINGTON, HoLy mMackerel | PROHIBITION € veryropy's aLL THROUGH BEING SEA- 3K, AMND THE e HAMK \S OFF THE COAST COF MAINE ON A BRIGHT MORNING .... Souppenty A . By STRANGE LOW Pop MOMAND LOOKING CRAFT Gwe ME TH' APPEARS IN THE Af LIVELIEST HOSS uvE GoT. G0SH MAME, OUR VACATION ON A RAACH N WILL BE A DUD (F WE DOA'T GET SOME RANCH CLoTHES ! T SIMPLY WOA'T WEAR DUDE RIDING 1T JUST GoES To SHOW WITH Some SEASE ITS EASY “To FIT INTO AN PICTURE WHAT 1_WANT To | KNOW S How YG\T INTER THEAM DIVIDED PANTS THEY _ CALL “CHAPS'! THEY AINT @oT “{EH- WE WANT T'LOOK JusT LIKE REAL Cow CATCHERS 1 WONDER IF WE GOT EVERYTHING, Wikt - BEDTIME STORIES up from the cornfield. Of course, Farmer Brown's Boy heard the ki-yi-ing and discovered Flip coming. “Good- ness, what has happened to Flip?” ex- “Here, BY THORNTON F. BURGESS Flip Alarms His Master. If knowledge costs a little pain Count 1t all as 0 mueh gain, Old Mother Nature. e | claimed Farmer Brown's Boy. Such a ki-yi-ing as there was in the | Flip. here!" Long Lane! Bowser the Hound, up in [ But Flip didn't stop. He merely took the dooryard. lifted ms head and lis- |8 €lance as his master as he shot past tened. Then he grinned. “I guess Flip | @nd Kept right on going. “Ki-yi! Ki- is learning another lesson,” said he. |¥! Ki-yi!" he cried, as he started Flip was whirling round and round | cross the m{;"fl"r:d 'f‘“'!fgu:;‘! Cho o i eadows _an: e Laugl ; as fast as he could go, trving to bite Then Farmer Brown's Boy dropped his Look LIKE A WAR ‘&*lm&n’\‘- run after Flip. It You AIN'T_THE TYPE. y. Farmer Brown's oY Could Flip have gone > JEFF, TLL TACKLE THE NEXT MAGAZINE EDITOR: THE TROUBLE [ BLAck WITH YoU (S THAT You Den'T NOW WATCH MEL T'LL GO k i % /> |He' UPSTAIRS AND BuLLboze ™e& MANAGING EDITOR. AND LAND THAT JoB. NO GEATLEMAN A GENTLEMAN WouLd HAVE R WELL, WORKING FOR THIS MAGAZING (S BETTER THAN see. he had been stung there. had sat down on that bank, he had,| without knowing it. sat down on the |mad in the heat? home of some Yellowjackets and they | "I didn't see any froth around his had resented it. Even vet, Flip didn't | mouth.” panted Farmer Brown's Boy as know what had happened. It felt just | he ran. “but certainly something is| as the sting of Bumble the Bee had | Wrong with him, T wonder where he | | can be going to.” | | By the time Farmer Brown's Boy got ( through the cornfield, Flip was far away across the Green Meadows in the direc- | tion of the Laughing Brook. It was too | hot to run far, so Farmer Brown's Boy soon had to stop running and be satis- | fled with watching. ~Meanwhile Flip disappeared among the bushes of the . | little swamp where the Laughing Brook | enters the Smiling Pool. He was no longer yelping. Farmer Brown's Boy approached the | place where Flip had disappeared, | whistling and calling. Presently Flip | poked his head out of the bushes. Then |in rather a shamefaced manner he | came out and approached his master. | He was wagging his tail so hard he wagged his whole hindquarters, but at the same time he was almost crawling | along the ground. and he looked as if | he thought he had done something | wrong and was ashamed. — WAS STILL KI-YI-ING, FOR THOSE STINGS DID HURT. . but he hadn't seen Bumble the around. As he whirled ing at the top of his angry little insects were | " Farmer Brown's Boy took one good look at Flip. Then he began to laugh. “I don't wonder you look ashamed.” said he. “What under the sun have you been doing? You look as if you had | been taking a mud cure.” | Now, if Flip could only have talked in the same language, he would have told Farmer Brown’s Boy that this was Y 350 LBS! WHAT A MONSTER ! HE'S JUST 150 POUNDS OVER WEIGHT! HE'S GOT To REDUCE, RouGHHOUSE AND 1 HAVE A SREAT 'DER LETS PUT HIM ON THRT. NEW TAKE HIM To THE RESTAURANT FOR LUNCH — AND BE SURE To STUDY THRT DIET _ CRREF YEP, THE STERK, POTATOES, VEGETABLES AND CRKE ARE FOR ME NOW FOR MY FRIENO- JUST A MINUTE = == \_WHAT Does THis WELL, WHAT ARE You' LOOKING AT * GO ON AND EAT! THAT DISH OF CUCUMBERS wairling around with him. Whenever F = as| ¥ { Jomger e eiaved there 1he Voree off he | damp. black. oozy mud. and in this T e o Snasing hix all ang | hie had rolled. Oh. how good it felt on : S Htarted @own the Long Lane. He was | those places where the Yellowjackets ey AN THING . } still ki-yi-ing, for those stings did hurt, | had stunghim! = | KENKLING e All of 3 sudden he remembered some- | p[ZST0 Ry e e Yov SK\’ i D e e Wince | dead Yellowjacket caught in the hair. SHo E« . b U : Then he understood. "o sald he. Wit ME ; | “you've 00 wi ellow- p Down the Long Lane he ran as fast | jyomic. what = ohould like to know| Looks Like 25 those lttle legs of his could take | is how you knew where to go and what | Roughho him. Down near the end he met his t do to get relief.” i use master, Farmer Brown's Boy, coming (Copyright, 1929.) Is on the | Diet! The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle DIET LST SAY ? \\_‘_’ EIGHTEEN DAY DIET \S ALL You GET LAST NIGRT WHEN 1 DANCED WITH RIM Al e I LIKE THE COLOR BRICK. Bs‘rTE}:!EY KNOW LIKE HAVE ON THE B1& GARAGE! DIDJA SEE THE NEW HOUSE THEY'RE PUTTIN' UP WITH ALL M:RWE FAV 1S THE THREE CoLOoR BRICK! CHALKLIT ~ STRAWBERRY! Across. . A well known opera. . An animal. . Demonstrative pronoun. . Indicate approval, . Pertaining to birds. . Climbed. . Plant of the nettle family. . Commence. . Long heroic poem. . Make clear. Combatant. 3 Hlid!:l\ in music. 3 C?mmnnded. . Bibiical name, I Chren., xxvi.10. . Except. - . Gaelic. 8y GENE BYRNES . Impair by usage. Hot . Part of a flower. . Dispatch. Down. . Pain. . Genus of evergreens. . Moist. . Show approbation. . Fit to live in. . Baking chamber. . Dress. . Remarked. . Listlessness, . Pramework. _ Indian tribe. 8-28 ;2 . Goddess of 7 = 65 OH, MESCAL! I'M FRIGHTENED . Egypt. . .Foll::ers of some particular doc- TO DEATH . THERE'S trine. . The whole lot. A tree. r SOMETHING WHITE AND GHOSTLY PROWLY ING “AROUNID IN @ 3 THE BACK : . YaroD!! 5. Badly. . Puts in order. . Among. 37. Large packages. . Marsh bird. . Little devil. . Climbing plant. A bird. 3. Not so much. * 5. Penetrate. . Greater part: Scotch. . Fashion. . Books of instruction. E1. King: Scandinavian mytk. . Paddle. . Word of greeting. THASS ALLRIGHT -1 DONT GIVE A DURN_WHAT WIS RELIGION 1S, T AINT FIT AN’ PROPER FER HIM TO 0 SASHEYIN' AROUND IN HIS NIGHTSHIRT /! SOMNAMBULIST, mescar! ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE. . A round-up. . Course. . Offers for sale. . Pertaining to. clothing. i 3 . French river. . Easy (Scotch). . Unusual. Practically all uth Africa are from soda - fcunteins in America,

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