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THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, APRIL 23 1931 1 THE CHEERFUL CHERUB] | 4 THEJONFS A ¥ | Pop MOMAND AND THERE T STOOD LIKE A SAP AT 5.AM IN TH PARK, AND NO EDDIE BOWERS! [or toy! WILL 1 GWE THAT EDDIE BOWERS A Plece OF My MIND *. THE \DEA OF THAT Die HOM GETTING ME OUT IN THE PARK AT SAM. AND THEN NOT TELL HIM T WANT TO SEE HIM, WiLL SHoWING uu——/ BUT, Pa, I HEARD THe| YOU DOOR SLAM ABOUT | L WAS 5 AM. AND HIS Roort IS EMPTY ! HE MUST YEP! 1 OWE EDDIE AN APoLogy ! I MUST HAvE MISSED HIM N T pPaRk ! GEE! I HOPE HE DoEINT WORK TOO HARD THIg MORNING —~ All my yesterdays in rows, 'Ffl]ed with joys =nd sorrows, Look with wise. advising eyes On toward my tomorrows nclfifi ME'S A RUNAWAY DOG, ALL RIGAT. ILL BET HE'S ADVERTISED 7 oA, : YES, NERE 1T 1S—HIS DESCRIPTioN EXACTLY. OM, GOSH— | WONDER ! 1 | ON, CALLTHEM ON THE PHONE AND SAY HE'S GOING To VISIT FRIENDS FOR ONE NIGHT, ANYHOW SocietyNote : Mr. & Mrs. Green Have as Their . HouseGuest? 4-23 | “WHY DOES HE WALK TO WORK WHEN HE HAS TWO CARS?" “BOTH HIS SONS ARE HOME FROM COLLEGE!” LETTER-OUT 7S A DIRT RACKET = By Charles H. Joseph. FISTED Letter-out and that's what he does with a newspaper. NE_OF MM BUSINESS, REWE- BUT AN RACKET THAT HURTS HONEST BUSINESS HURTS A NEWSPAPER, - WHEN NOT MUCH TO CLANCY - TELL, MR. WALSH, TART | GUESS o e | NOU PONT Kaow 1 GOT A L\'TTLE -- FUNNY WALSH WEN QUT HERE JUST O StE ME- HE'S A B\G SHOT- B\GGER THAN THE COMMISSIONER, THEN SAN- Letter-out and youw'll find him around a table. REVISER BE LESS TROUBLE T ‘EM~‘[HAT$ Letter-out and you ean't have a card game without him. RELAXED L Letter-out and join a chofr. GNEISS | GRAY Letter-out and it takes an ‘In- genious mind to do it. REVISED Remove one letter from each word and rearrange to spell the word called for in the last column. Print the omitted letter in center column opposite word you have removed it from. If you have “lettered-out” correctly it will spell & handy man around the house. Checking Up. §8 | Answer to Yesterday's LETTER-OUT. Rex U5 Pat O Cop e Tl STAND HeRe- How's THIS-T'LL | /N0, You CHASE [/ WeRe'S A BcTicR \DEA- does that to his plans. SCARIET [(C | H 1 il B MARSHAL EATTICE YALE INFLAME Letter-out and & man ALTERS Letter-out and without them firemen would have nothing to do. ALARMS Letter-out and Westerners need ‘em in their business. CATTLE Letter-out and some men vote that way. AYE and thousands dle that FAMINE Letter-out way. (Copyright, 1931.) Daily Cross-Word Puzzle 8. Strikebreaker. 8. Ditches. 34, Healthy, 8. Loyal. 8. One of the United Greeks: Eccl, 39. Ridges. 28, Afold. 19. Belglan marble. Reveals. Anything. Composition for street paving. Chinese soclety. Chatter: dial. Sharpened. Loiter. A standard of judging. ‘Wings. Eng. LESBRRERRRURY . Australian cry. . Give medicine. . Lohengrin's bride. . Fretful. . Stone used in street paving. . Antlered ruminant. ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE | . Feminine name. . Green spot in desert. . Grasp. . City in Soviet Russia. 5. Saunter, . Genus of crabs, lobster and shrimps. . Nodule in crystalline rock. . Animal. . Imprisonment. . Installation address. . Monarch. Every one. . Let it stand. . Lacelike, 5. Cereal grains, 7. Pectliarity. . A member of an indigenous race of Japan . Carry supplies in a lumber camp. . Feminine name, 2. Fasten: Scot. 3. Medicinal plant., . Resounded 5. Rebounding. 7. Deepest within, . Harsh cry. . Fatal event. . Ayawn. . Mollusk with conical shell, . Baurels. . Formed into a circle. ‘To climb. Rigid Masculine name. . Begone! . Fruit of the apple family. . Fishes' eggs. . One of a tribe of Siouan Indians. Seven Tongues of Tallinn. Long the pirates of the Baltic, then | the subject of the Kings of Denmark and Sweden or bowing allegiance to German barons, or conguered by Peter the Great, it was not till 1918 that Es- tonia and its capital, Tallinn, became its own again. The top of Tallinn is Toompea, the great castle of the Mid- dle Ages, which frowns on the city, but lifts the visitor to see a wonderfuily at- tractive cify of gables, spires and cobble- stones. Bullt on a rock crag in 1219, you can look down its massive steep sides to the now tree-planted moat and easily visualize the embattled past it has known. The city was fortified in | the early fourteenth™ century, and its old gates and wall remnants yet remain. In Tallinn you can speak Russian, Ger- | man, English, Prench, Swedish or Dan- ish, and understood, though you ' speak not Etonian. F) BRING A LION DowN wiTH A Bow AnD ARROW. T'LL SHow Nou'! FREEMAN A Bit Fussy. DIDJA EVER HEAR MY UNCLE WILLIE AND YOU GENTLEMEN CHASG THe LIioN PAST M€ TRAT THING RANGING FROM RIS Beer ? By SLMHUNTLEY Signs of Spring. chase YOU CHASE THE LioN . PAST THE LION! PAST US§, muTT. 1 DON'T KNOW WHAT AT 1S, BUT \F 1T WILL HEL® MY GAME I'LL BuY oNE US- AND LeT THe BLOOMING LION cHase s TALKING WHILE I Putrt S0 THATS WHAT THE TROUBLE WANT YO MAKE A SLING we'Ll POSTPONG (T — AND PLAY A DOUBLE-HeADER. TOMORROW. COWAHR !