Evening Star Newspaper, July 6, 1931, Page 28

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MAIDENS “I SUPPOSE YOU'RE SELLING MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS TO WORK YOUR WAY THROUGH COLLEGE?" “NO, MISS, I'VE BEEN THROUGH COLLEGE.” LETTER-OUT THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., MONDAY, JULY 6, 1931. I have my share of life's rewards And yet at times ) feel downhearted, Because the me I thought 14 be Has somehow never gotten started. RV Come WHY DID You APoLoGIZE To TRAT MAN 7 HE RUNS INTo You AND You MEEKLY SAY, EXCUSE ME By Charles H. Joseph. VOTERS BELTEVED ENSURED KISMET BETRAYED Remove one letter from each word and rearrange to spell the word called Letter-out and it'll warm you. Letter-out and it's a sloping. edge Letter-out and it will last Letter-out_and everybody tries to keep up with them. Letter-out _and _you've something on your bill. saved 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 you will take a chance. Answer to Saturday’'s LETTER-OUT. CARTING ] SHARON |A ARMIES BRACES ELDERS | E | R Letter-out and it's a great sport. RACING Letter-out and the matador 18 in anger. HORNS Letter-out and it will help you pay your biils a I M | RAISE Letter-out and they're the world's sour faces. CRABS Letter-out and it's en_ Enslish boroush noted_for its woolens. LEEDS (Copyright, 1931.) . The culmination. . Tapestry. . Without in Latin. . Rewarded. . To pass a rope through a hole. . Incense. . An ancient city of Babylon. . To frost. . Solemn entreaty. . Bring to a standstill. . The body. . The same. . Most highly esteemed. . To no extent. . Cushion. . Repetition of parts in living things. . Grieve secretly for. . Man's nickname. . Deprived of force. . Casts down. . Crayoned pictures. . Mountaineers. . Adorn. . Alignments. . From in Latin. . Percolate. . Crown. . Burro. . Meadow. . Consisting of lard. . Trustworthy friends; collog. . Ogles. . Weapon. . Dropsy of the cellular tissue. Article. . Exist. . Place of shelter. . A cereal grass. . Mimicked. 2. Scotch griddle cake. . Hawk-like bird. Down. . Bacred bull of Egypt. Run in a mold. . Note of the scale. . Magistrate of ancient Rome. . Land measure. . Of the matter in law. . Put in a safe place. . Wards off. . Adapts. . A drunkard. . Individual pecullarity of expression. . The middle of the day. . Eagle. . A creeper. . Electrified atom. . Sum up. . Gull-like birds. . Walked unsteadily. . Gems. . Fathers, . Anglo-Saxon slaves. 5 %:.lk or support. . Flaw. . Star-shaped. . Pelts. . Ccnfused medley, . Medicinal plant. . Beverage. . Armpit. . In a vertical position. . Rodent of South America. . Immediately. . Misses one's aim. . Sanction. . Council. 63. Stitch. . Little hill of damp sand. 68. Type measure. 70. Jumbled type. — . Tanned Amid Snow. A Winter tan amid the snows is pos- ~ | sible for all the tourists who visit Aus- tria between December and March. ®| This land of mountains, lakes and woods, -provide scores of fashicnable re- sorts for the Winter traveler, from the ski life and tobcggan runs of Bregenz | on Lake Constance to the snow trails in the Vienna forest. In spite of low temperature, the climate is dry, so that the cold is not as penetrating as in | more humid lands. It is quite common to see people cut in the snow in light flimsy dresses, with bare necks and arms covered with the tan which is the 8ift of the warm Winter sun of Austris. NESSR, OLIWVER= THERE'S MY \DERA OF A REAL GUM - I'NE GOT EVERN PICTURE OF WIM | EVER SAW - CUT 'EM OUT OF TH' PAPERS AND TACKED ‘BM LP HERE ON TH' WALL = WHAT A GO-GETTER Maybe It’s a Bag of Peanuts. CLUB SWEEPSTAKES' YESTERDAY, You KNOW, AND “THE BoYS ARE PLAY/NG THE EIGRTEEN HOLES OVER AGA/N FREEMAN I = Y ] 5 \\\\ \! Morning. 5 < ‘\ L1111 bt HURRY UP HOME PNHEAD! 1 JUS’ SAW A QUART OF ICE CREAM GOIN' 1IN YOUR e r© “u;fls [ GANG BYRNES A Fast , THIS CHAR, WARBUCKS - NOU'VE HEARD OF HIM - STARTED FROM NOTHIN, THEN SAY = BUT MONEN NEVER SPOILED A GUN LIKE HIM= SUH KNOW TS A SAP \DEA | $'POSE, BUT 1NVE AUWANS WISWHED |\ 1 WAS SECOND IN THE ook CARE OF THE 3 EAD WHAT WAS TW' RUCKUS OVER TO TW' FOURTH OF JULVY CELEBRATION AW, NOTHIN' MUCH ‘CEST MULEY BATES FELL THROUGH TH BASS | DRUM __ THEN ONE OF TH [ MUSICIANS SLAMMED HIM OVER TH HEAD WITH A TUBA — MY APPROACR SHOT |/ /// SWEEPS AND 1 WON §3%||WENT INTO THE CAN | FROM.TOM PRYOR WHICK |{ON SANK A TWENTY- FOOTER | on THE ELEVENTH- WHY N TIME DONT Yo LOOK WHERE YOURE ‘GoING T OW, NOTHING = NOTHING AT ALL~ HA' wA' SO NOU THINK THAT B\RD WARBUCKS (S QUITE A GUY, EX? |\ SUPPOSE MOU KNOW HE WERNT BROKE A WHILE BACK- LOST BVERY DIME HE HAD - WHERE DO You SUPPOSE HE \S NOW T THE TENTH AND I LEf Me TELL You AGOUT THE BiRDIE FOUR 1 GoT ON The FQURTEENTH, | joe s —¥ WHEN I GO HOME PUDDINHEAD BEAT ME! 800 H00-00 cosm! T RUNTH o INSTRUMENT . WHAT NEXT' You RUN SLAM INTo A MAN AND THEN EXPECT KM To APoLoGizE ! SAY, 1S TRERE ANYTRING . ) Do “THAT'S RIGHT P [/SURE =~ _| HEARD THAT oy By L ~ = B it BIRDS RE SMART- [/ BET HE ST TRNT STORN HIMSELF- [OgHIN —= ToMORROW=—e X778 1100k A FULL QWING, A CUT ON fue OALL| AND IT DROPPED , | DEAD FoR A THREE. HE BEAT ME BY 0 Fl'-MINITS! AN WHEN t GOT HOME THERE WAS NO ICEXCREAM ™S WAS | A TUBA FOUR.

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