Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
rAE_EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 25 1930. 1 WE MAVE Some | Mm VERY FINE O SR - STEP THIS Wy WY DEAR s THAT'S A VERY FowerFUL mipLe ! You CouLd Knoo AN ELePHANT OVER. WITH THAT Guw !t THE CHEERFUL CHERUB Y R Y TR O ERTGTR, & I think of the places I loved in the past, A river, a low- ning tree, And wonder since they heart | Boy A e FOR SHOOTING moose — Bl Moose! M A GUN, BEING AS You're GOINE MOOSE HUNTING UP THAT ABOUT 600 SHOTS A MinuTe ! | Alls Taking | No Chances. ANE, TTHAS WL SE BAD FOR ANNIE = \WRY COULDNT “THE WEVE GOT DRN WOOD AND A TIGHT HOUSE - BUT _PAMPNESS WiLL CREEP \N, AND \S SA® TOR FRVER-~ RAN RAWY Rawn! WELL, \'T WAS BOuND o T STARTS O RAWN N THESE PARTS \T POURS FOR DAMS ) AN WEEKS - *I'D COME TO SEE YOU MORE OFTEN, BUT IT'S 80O FAR OVER TO| """ YOUR APARTMENT." MALL AND I'vE BRUISES FOR S TQ:‘:: ”&me ° 0 LITTL ON o Rules Govern Office Dress WY SN 1T 1N G\VE ME A GOOD SHAMPOO WITH CGGS AND BROKEN GLASS = T THINK THERE'S T UKE ™ wALTZ BUT NoT WITH JAPANESE Mee: WHERE'S BREATHE IN MY FACE. Do You HAVE TO JuMP Going to Work in Fin- ery Meets With Crit- icism, Although Trimly - Dressed Girls Are Expected to Produce Good Re- sults in Their Day’s Labor. Mos;rnfl\'hlme .":‘ :‘Y:'l'z.c;od. d“} mfleg,:e‘.‘ she applied for a position It may not be that the employer actus cares very much how she 4 it by the way she dresses he work and eschewed any frivolous, feminine touches. We are not so*strict as this now, and the girl on long sleeves in office hours i': sometimes put down as a %ude. afternoon frocks is to show rather bad taste. Showy or abundant jewelry is cer- tainly out of place in an office. The only diamonds that the extremely well bred girl wears are those of her en- gagement ring and there are young women who prefer not to wear even a id engagement ring during office Irs. It is & safe rule to make to dress ap- propriately for the hour that you go to your office, which is an early morning hour. Diamond adornment and very elaborate hair dressing are certainly not ropriate €or 8 or 9 o'clock a.m. Usually the excuse for going to work in finery is that the girl has some eve- ning engagement after working hours .|and cannot conveniently go home in She Tripped ON MY Toes? the interval between office closing and her ent. But it is not a dif- oult to make a quick change in the dress! room after work is over ted | and to add any embel{:‘anhment in the of jewelry at this time. oreover the girl who works all day may quite ly appear in the eve- ning in her attire. This is in far better taste than to spend the whole day in te finery for the sake of an after-office-hour engagement. e Ostrich Growers Elated. Oudstshoorn, South Africa, center of the once prosperous ostrich raising in- | , here | dustry, is rejolcing over the order placed by a leading Paris dressmaker for several thousand pounds of feathers, the largest order received by the local co-operative soclety since the World ‘War. The order is belleved to indicate the popularization of ostrich feather trimmings for women's garments which will lead to at least a partial revival of the feather industry when ostrich skin for purses and of articles is go- ing out. UNDERSTOOD THiS WIRE, MOM = gsuzfiugusa |sN‘?1 DOING DETECTING WORK ! {T SRYS HE'S FOLLOWING THE ; FOOTSTEPS OF EARL SANDE — SANDE 1S A JOCKEY ! NOW, DON'T TRY To CRAB THE KID'S AMBITION — THAT'S WHERE MOST PARENTS MAKE A MISTAIKE - LET WM Do WHAT HE WANTS AND HE'LL HRAVE_NO COME BACK IN_LATER NONSENSE! MOST JOCKS RRE MIGHTY FINE KIDS — IN FRCT \F THEY GeT WITH A GooD STABLE THAT HRS FAST HORSES THEY MAKE LoTS OF MONEY ! 7 WY NoT T QNE LUCKY' SEASON ON THe TRACK AND HE'LL NEVER HAVE 4 To WORK ANY MORE! A -MAYBE T WON'T HAVE To E\THER? ). A Jockev! SUCH A DEGRADING PROFESSION DON'T TeLL ME THAT YOU'RE ENCOURAGING IT! | KEN KLING That Is If He'’s on = == SPIKE 1S OUT ON T\ i URSE AND TONY 5 JAHDONIL:/ADNOY THE ONLY CADDIE LEFT WITHOUT A CADDIE. '\, TONY 1S THE BEST CADDIE HAT'S YouR- WE RAVE. HKE CADDIES FOR OBJECTION T, ME AND TRE CLUB CHAMPION 7. WE MAY BE O.K. W A FOR You SAARPSMOTERS] BUT NOT FOR Me. WON'T HAVE ANYONE Bur WM 9 % :?'.’4—- Y OPIZP ul' RIS VOICE IS Too STRONG, WHEN HE CALLS, "OUT OF BOUNDS /* EVERYCODY ON -THE COURSE CAN HEAR IT NO WONDER. YOuU DIDN' WHEN 1 FELT \T ON TAINT GONNA RANN TH\S AFTERRNCON ! . Charge for depreciation in money changing. . Farinaceous drink. . Roman harve:t goddess . Within from without. . Card game. . Nonsense. 7. Clutch. . Oll. . Palm leaf. . Imaginary celestial zone. . Compact. . Russian village. Transferee of property title. Most obtuse. . Capacity of a tumbler, . Cut one’s grinders. . Of the ear. . Show contempt. . The goggler fish. . Bright. . Lapses. . Pumed. . Disjoin. . Jacob's descendants, Raze . By. . Largest toad. . Spanish horse. . Cuckoo. . Old feudal noble of Japan. . Anclent box. . Afternoon social. . Cause to adhere, . Feminine suffix. | Large bird. wer. ve. Down. . Having short, sharp turns. . Enter. 3 firle;:u where athletic contests are eld. . Small jugs. . Placid. . Wine cask. Sacred portrait. . Threw sidewise. . Inhabitant of Albania. . Stinging plants. - Device for finding elevation above 1 !Bel level. . Burnishing preparation. . Automobile accessories. . Handle. . The east wind. . Non-aspirate. . Marked with streaks of color, as a flower. . Subsisted. . Curled at the edges. . Accelerator. . Pertaining to fields. . Ecclesiastical dignitary. . Large glass vessel. . Pertaining to ten. . A flower. . Envoy. . Surgical instrument. Set fire to. 50. After-dinner nap. More flery. . Pleases. . Chill. 1 THOUGHT 1 GIVE YUK TWO-BITS TO WATCH MY TEAM OF HOSSES WHILST 1 WAS IN TH' DOIDNT YUH AN WHEN THEY GOT OUT ON WATCH EM . THE MAINI ROAD WHERE HIT WAS GOOD RUNINING , THEY KICKED UP SO MUCH DLUST 1 COULDNIT SEE EM NO 2, J QOMNNIE, IF YOUR FATHER EARNED FORTY DOLLARS ANID GAVE YOUR MOTHER MALF,WHAT WOWLD SHE HAVE T, . Postures. A vt B VERETT SIS TS vessels, &