Evening Star Newspaper, July 9, 1931, Page 37

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l THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1931. A PARS, AT WE'VE GOT To Go To|| BY, THIS TIME SHE omuy LAST, mo 10t HAS LETTER-OUT By Charles H. Joseph | Letter-out and & golfer uses it. ATHEISM trimming. SHEARING | Letter-out _and it's the echef's PR — Letter-out and the captain does that with his company. SEMINAL Letter-out and that was the | finish. that wi | DEPEND | | ‘ Letter-out and you ship cotton ay. STABLE Remove one letter frem each word and rearrange to spell the word called for in the last column. Print the omitted letter in center column opposite woid you have removed it frcm. If you have “lettered-out” correctly it will spell what Satan tries to co. Answer to Yesterday's LETTER-OUT. WELL GET SENSIBLE IN A COUPLE MORE CENWRIES. GIVE US TIME IS AWFUL THE WAY You MEN TOoRTURE Your SELVES WITH COATS AND HIGH COLLARS 1N SUMMER Letter-out and they are trick- YEs, BUT Wi! GRADUALLY | C | *="" Saams - IMPROVING. FOR INSTANCE — A Letter-out and he'll take motice. i | NOTICER CHASMS REACTION Letter-out and it's a class sepa- ¢ in India. [R [ e | D Letter-out and you mske ‘em on 4 TRACES: wxsm‘s guné‘h'ke e Lartl S Lesterjout and that kind of &~ | & Is Gndngll.]'y road is messv for the motorist. TARRED Cooling Off. Halloween. SWEDISH RETARDS (Copyright, 1931.) A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK [ BY HERBERT PLUMMER. MHS4 EDITH NOURSE ROGERS of Massachusetts fast is building up & reputation as the “flying Congress- | woman.” The first woman ever to serve as +chairman of a House veterans’ subcom- mittee, and the first woman ever to serve as Speaker pro tem of the House, is a real aviation enthusiast. While she doesn’t keep track of her hours in the air, they have been many. She uses a plane much as other people use a train or automo- bile. It is her fa- vorite way of travel- ing. She is not a pilot, but has held the stick several times and thinks she i} could qualify easily enough for a pilot's | license. Her irterest in aviation dates back fifth_district causéd by the death of her husband. She received more than twice the number of votes polled by her Democratic opponent. She has been returned at each elec- tion since by big majorities. That she is popular in her whole dis- trict is evidenced by her impressive majorities in the rural sections. She carried the two Democratic citles of Lowell and Woburn by more than two to one. Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Making Choices. According to approved psychological doctrine, we possess a seemingly in- definite number or “neural patterns” or paths, along which we shift and re- shift our present and remembered ex- periences. A neural pattern is an in- ference; perhaps it's a fact. Anyway, several years to the time when an air- modern psychology says that a neu- plane was a novelty to most people. ral pattern is a nerve path in the brain She was fiying even then. | tissue itself. = | If we could see all these patterns or It, perhaps, was chiefly through her | paths, they would look like so many efforts that her home city of Lowell has | tracks running into the rallway yards & place cn the aviati®h map. That|cf any large city. And we are always city's airport and airplane manufactur- | contructing new paths for totally new ing plant largely are the fruits of her | experiences. endeavor. She christened the first| Paths have a purpose. They carry plane ever built in Lowell. our ideas, which are nothing other than Mrs. Rogers' congressional work is| generalized notions. It seems that we devoted for the greater part to helping | get the habit of dispatching these ideas World War veterans. She served over- | over appropriate or customary paths seas in 1917 and for four years was| The net result is that we do not gen- with the American Red Cross in charge | erally make choices, but merely shift of disabled veterans. | 2 new idea over on the track we built Three Presidents—Harding, Coolidge | for the notions that look most like it. and Hoover—have made her their per-| This description may seem sonal representative in the care of dis- | chanical for a reasoning animal such as abled veterans. | man, but the plain fact is that it fits JEFF, LEND ME THAT DOLLAR BACK AGAIN= T GOTTA PAY M 1T BACK TO SIR SIDNEY- > o Pioas It is under her guiding hand that| sweeping legislation for the future hos- | pitalization needs of the Nation's war | veterans is in process of formulation. She conducted hearings on requests | for more than $30,000,000 for mere buildings, beds, diagnostic clinics and out-patient _dispensaries for mentally the human mechanism very well and most cases mak:s for efclency. For it saves time and annoyance in all un-| Mutt Keeps important matters where deliberstion| Money i would finally make no difference mey in But still we do make choices. We do| (Circulation. 50 only when we are confronted with i some unusual situation. Figuratively speaking, we look our system of mneu- =\ ©io3 v TRBURE. e WRET'S W B\G N“O‘\E;‘E». WHAT HAPPENEDT WHNL WRIAT ST ik 5 GREAT SH\NTS ! WHY - YOV ARE i BAH JOVE, MUTT SENDS. SIDNEY, LEND ME ME THAT DOLLAR. THAT DOLLAR BACK—-T T NEVER THOUGHT GO¥ TOo SETTLG UP 7'D S€e IT WITH JEFF. and physically ailing ex-soldiers. ral A Small woman, & cheery person With | to. ske ast Whae Woull pecns of the crisply curling gray hair, she has ew idea if we were to shift it to this sympathetic attitude for veterans' needs. |or that track. We wure then merely Mrs. Rogers came to Congress in|guessing, trusting to luck. 1925, elected to fill the vacancy in the (Copyright, 1931.) N, YOU LOOK F 7 ¢ . IR o Zoured ; e CAN You BREAK PAR . YEAR IN COLLECE FREEMAN He'll Do h With NOW ISNT THAT A SILLY WAY TO CARRY A ‘Bsox! PUT THAT k DOWN! ’ 7 WHEN Tt GOT UP FROM THE BENCH. AT THE BALL GAME MY PANTS ' JiMmMiE. WHAT ON EARTH HAS HAPPENED THATS A FUNNY wAY ACROSS. . Trenchant. . . Event. . Ostrich-like bird. . Ancient two-handled wine vessel. . Menaces. . Pertaining to the palate. 55. African antelope. . Parent: colloq. . Pilot fishes. . British preparatory school. . Drinking vessel of India. By . Repeat . By. . Splinters. . Learned. . Fortunes, 5. . Lowered. i, Closed car. DOWN. . Dreadful . Wealth. 29. Genus of grasses. . Loving. - Measure of cloth. . Above. . French writer. . Pronoun. . Pertaining to a hare. . Convey supplies in a lumber camp. 5. Basest. Fetters. . Fabulcus birds. . Camp _stores. . A portion. . Heroical. . Death. . Eucharistic plate. L MILKING T . Artist’s mixing boards. . Small islands: French, . Senseless. . Sardinia; abbr. o0 WHAT KIND OF 5 gmnm'mm m"."' with ‘eara. i oIL DO VoL USE . roduc isonous leaves. Emnus part. " Naw, paceumM L IM FEELIN' HER . Ooze. i gnemmm aleep. . Breaf g T n . 28, Taken out. . Got up. . Made verses. . Congealed water. . Iron block holding shoe of & stamp. - Wearing loose slipper. F g g ’ oy ; ; § / T7 OM,1 USUALL . Coais with » hard paint. y 7 \ 5 (2 i % / A 'EM 1M LONE- . Corncake, 4 0 b ; | Smart, - ; : — . Issue from. . Greeted. 5. Fondle. . Allowance for waste. . To extirpate. Eggs in Latin, 9. Girl's name. of verh “to be .

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