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22 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MAY 4, 1930. === AR R Sunday Morning Among the Cross-Words Across. .1 Cease. -5 Foray. 9 East Indian island. 13 A Scot. 17 Style of architecture. 18 Otherwise. 19 Scandinavian deity. 20 Prevent. 22 Perennial flower- * ing shrub: var. 23 Doff in token of inferiority. 24 Ensilage tank. 25 Code of ceremonies. 27 Australian ~ cursorial bird. 28 Malign. 30 Alcohol of the - paraffin series. 32 Arabian garment. 83 A beverage. 35 Rocky crest. 36 Strike, 37 Merely. 38 An item of value. 40 European country. 44 Ponders. 47 Satisfies the - appetite of. A8 A vegetable. 50 Ladder: provincial English. 51 Ridges of sand. %2 A conjunction. 53 Public ways. 57 Played the scenes of. 59 Animals that nurse their young. 63 Operatic solo. - B4 Child's toy. 66 Adjusted properly. 67 American Indian tribe. 68 Pen name of . Charles Lamb. 69 Elevate. 770 Impression. 2 Seine. ‘73 Edible paste derived from palms. 74 Molecule. ‘75 Small children. .76 Merry songs. 78 Spangle. -80 Solitary, 81 Anger. 82 Stream. 83 Springs. .87 Strain, 90 Quartzes. 93 Obscures. ‘97 The ship of - Jason. 98 Plane surface. 102 Prepare for publication. 103 Alkaline cleansing * material. 104 Disencumber. 105 Young salmon: provincial English, 107 Rent. dda dAdddd Cdde dEEE JENEE NN UREE JENEE dEEE AR AR dEBREEE B T e PEFP e T 108 East Indian water vessel, 109 Teases. 111 Finger cap. 113 Newness. 115 Fool. 116 Prison: English slang. 117 Attract. 119 Moreover. 120 In piquet, a set of five. 123 Hills of drifting sand. 124 Public warehouse. 126 Mediterranean three-measted ves- sel. 130 To bring to naught. 131 Wave. 132 The macaw. 134 Wild plum, 135 Japanese statesman. 136 Prophetess. 140 Legacy. 144 High: mausic. 145 Expand. 147 Chinese ounce. 148 Month of the Jewish year. 149 Blood-poisoning. 151 Regarded with strong attachment 152 Character in Genesis. 153 A man’s nickname. 154 Sea eagles. 155 Fresh information. 156 Designation. 157 Retained. 158 Dozes. Down. 1 Tails. 2 Japanese plant with edible roots, 3 Hebrides Islands. 4 Rendezvous. 5 Falls back. 6 Possessing wings, Egyptian deity. Erase. Chinese god. Mine entrance, Base A different one. Measure of weight. Noxious. Allow. Willfully absent. Curbs. Article of furniture. South American armadillo. Ballads. 29 Food made from taro-root. 31 Possessive pronoun, 34 Reiterates. 37 Breakfast food. 39 Small mound. 41 Corroded. 42 Church fast. 43 Craves. 44 Sacred musical compositions. 45 Availed one’s self of. 60 Counter-tenor voice. 61 Carnivorous animal of Asia and Africa. 62 Identical. 65 Risked. 67 Wander idly. 71 An artery. 47 Total. 49 An upper story. 52 English philosopher, 1561- 1626. 53 Sodium chiorid. 54 Three united in a group. 55 Pissure. 56 Beverage: coll. 58 Intimation. 59 Persian priests. 77 A Confederate general. 79 Unit of work. i JEEE JEN al [dEEE ddEEE e dEE JuEN JJEEED ol 1 i SRR O | «HiEn 10 Classify. H%%fllfigg I%Zgfi==%%% o 4 JdEEE JNEE dEEEE JEEE T T T TP 14 Motor car: colloq. 15 Couples.._ 16 County in New York State. 17 Meat dish. 18 Feminine name. 19 Nerve network. 20 .Regulated by moderating. 22 Obliterates. 24 Liquors. 25 Break suddenly. 73 Fisherman’s hat. 85 Edible Ceylon moss. 86 A voice range. 91 Shamrock land. 92 Hindu soldier. 93 Cancels. 26 Cuts lengthwise. 29 Those under the doctor’s care. 33 Turning machines. 35 Among. 36 Exist. Poems. Country beyond the Jordan. Legal claim. By means of. Sins. Foljage. Cherish as something sacred. Fleshy. Anglo-Saxon slave. 49 Player who cuts the cards. Highway. b4 Primroses. Burden. Never-ending: poet. Heroine of “Cavalleria Rusticana.” Ply with reason for acting. French annuity. English college. Senator from Pennsylvania. Satiated. Point of time. Down. Hop kiln. Silent. Individual entry. 4 Paths alongside 95 Form of glove. 96 Linger. 100 Fortify. 105 Part of one’s attire. 106 Surfeit. 110 Suffix, denoting agent. 111 A liquid measure, 112 Epoch. a canal. 5 Extra tire. 6 Escorts. 7 Outer covering. 8 Rather than. 9 Necessary. 10 Mexican shawl. 11 Native metals. 12 Ceremony. 13 Small mounds. 21 Others. 23 Hostile incursion. 25 Identical. 26 Slant. 27 Burdened. 28 Anatomical passages. 29 Resolve into grammatical elements. 30 Ingenuous. 31 Large plants. 32 Meaning. 34 Runners of short races. 39 Sea bird. 40 Tabbed. 42 Irish. 44 Ages. 46 Paid attention to. 49 Turkish court. 50 Possessed. 51 Slighting remark. 52 Pulled apart. 53 Pury. 54 Copper coin. 55 Greek letter. 56 Conspire. 57 Rational. 60 Beverage. The answers to the cross-word puzsles on this page will be found in Monday’s Star. Too Steady. “That new clerk you've got seems to be a steady young fellow.” “Yes, if he was any steadier he'd be abso lutely motionless.” 131 Sows. 133 Species of poplar, 136 Simmer. 137 Tranquillity. 138 Cauterize. 139 Poor street. 140 Bill. 141 River in Germany 142 Jibe. 143 Beginner, 146 Greeting. 150 Close. 116 Poetical four- line stanza. 118 Shoulder-piece. 120 Piece of tobacco. 121 Up to the time of. 122 Specter. 123 Riyer in Scotland. 125 Sooner than. 127 Censures. 128 Genus of mollusks. 129 The whale family. S‘Buried Alive.s! Continued from Twentieth Page following autograph inscription: “To my, Mother. Remember! September 15th, 1917— February 15th, 1927.” It is to be noted that - the word “Remember!” had been written in English. What this and the dates signify no one knows. The corpse was that of a powerfully-built man, with thick gray hair and a stiff moustache. His features were so distorted that at first Bachelet and -Guyvallet were a little doubtful about his identity, but when they came to ex- amine the face carefully they unhesitatingly, declared that the body was that of their friend, Clement Passal. From this moment the strange affair of the “Knights of Themis” and the burial alive of Clement Passal, alias the “Marquis de Cham- paubert,” passed into the hands of the Paris police, and it became the duty of the astute officials and detectives of the prefecture to carry out a thorough investigation of one of the most sensational tragedtes of recent years. Much was clear to them from the very outset. They knew, for instance, all about the dead man—the details of his like of crime were in the official archives. Only the secret of this final adventure of his life—the story that lay behind the terrible business in the Wood of Verneuil—remained obscure. The investigations of the police, however, soon laid the mystery bare, revealing the details of a story more amazing, surely, than the most fertile-brained writer of fiction ever conceived. (Copyright, 1930.) Sugar Supply and Prices. IT looks like a sweet time ahead for the world. The visible supply of sugar has attained a figure never before reached in hise tory. The crop for the current season is estie mated at nearly 30,000,000 tons, only about 400,000 below last year’s record, which, coupled with a large holdover, has brought the price of raw sugar to new low levels,