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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, JULY 14, 193L SO MONTMORENCY JONES KNOWS THe|| WELL, AL, 1T LOoKS O YEW P SaME DAY IM GOINe DUKE OF DOVER, AnD dayT TW' Duwe 13]| TO ME A3 IF You 1 SHOULD TAKE|| To FORGET MyseLF COMING TO PARIS AND WISHEY US To || WILL SUST Have Tof| A ROKE IN THE|| AND USE SoMEe ™MEET HiIM ' AMD THE DUME HOLD D TAKE A ROKE IN EYE' BECAUSE || HARSH wWORDS TO 1.0.0. For ¥#{0,000. THE EYE FRom THe|| YOU MADE A AINT THAT A& FINE Duxe AND LET IT SAP ouT ofF Go AT TrAT| BY JovE ! wriLe IN PARIZ I MUST 3 Look My OLD FRiewp, JT. MONTMORENCY JoNES, UP, BoLLy ! HE'S A JoLLy sorT, YKRNOW i THAT Guy EDDIE BOWERS — ME THE WAy | T . b s PoaMg;mo % T " Ex ? Speaking CemE AND 6ET IN TRE PICTURE, MR. GREEN, ITS GOING To BE IN ALL THE. PAPERS 1 Think THATS Your EAR, JOE, oVER AT THE FAR EDGE m WHAS MATYER 7 LEMME SEE ! Photo- graphed for the Society Page. “LOOKS KINDA SUSPICIOUS, DOESN'T IT?" LETTER-OUT By Charles H. Joseph. JUST TH' SPOT FOR OUVER- { AND HERES TH BACK ROOM NEXT TO MM QFFICE AND WITH THE ‘PHONE \N= A TRUNK LINE AND) FWITCHBOARD, BUT A PRWATE DOOR TO THE BACK STAIRS SO HE Can SLIP IN OR OUT AN NOSODYM TR WISER= AND WELL HAVE ROSTED GLASS N ALL TH' WINDOWS SO NO NOSEN B\RDS CAN SET X WHO'S INSIDE - I Letter-out and be satisfied DISPUTE NOW WHAT ! UP A FEW OF MM WS- 98 BRI AND CLOSE-MOUTH! N!' Letter-out and fishermen use ! k THATLL START _OU them. Y e ORGANIZATIO BRINDLED | Letter-out and see nothing Letter-out and he has lived longer. RELIED Letter-out and use them for ELBOWS AN 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 oppusite word you have removed it from. If you have “lettered-out” correctly it is inclined to make us haughty. - Answer to Yesterday's LETTER-OUT. = { v 1 OFFICER, ARREST THIS ‘ l He Looks |fLisTen- OF FICER, JUST LEMD BLOOMING BOUNDAH— a‘w‘t HONEST || ME A DoLLAR- T'LL BE HE'S A CROOK - i o me. BACIC IN A MINUTE . Letter-out apd they help the CANGSTER | i I farmers. - RANGES T SHALL JOLLY WELL HAVE THe BLIGHTER ARRESTED FOR STEALING WITHOWT A LICENSE— He OWES | Mme A DOLLAR - e Letter-out and much of our time 2 | STEWARD 3 TROUSERED RESTORED N Letter-out and it's the barber's Dbusiness. , l SCRAPE I K | Letter-out and you'll find him at I U | Letter-out and get it again. 4; PRANCES every ball zams CORKERS SCORER (Copyright, 1931.) Bluff at First Sight. 4 R, % JOE, HE GETS SO MAD HE CAN'T TALK. I O YOS . Ve WE'D LIKE To EXPRESS WIMSELF BUT DOC. NO MATTER. HOwW 4 WHEN HE'S STEAMING WITH ANGER WS MANY ROTTEN SHOTS RE. /5 FALSE UPPERS DROP, START CHATTERING, AND HE CAN'T GET A WORD & MAKES, HE NEVER SAYS A WoRD THROUCH THOSE CHATTERING BUT 1 ThoucwnT 1T WAS A FAMILY OF WOODPECKERS DINING ON A NEARBY OAK OR, 1 REARD THAT NOISE 1. A book of rubrics. 5. Pertaining to the cheek. 10. Familar talk Down. 14. Detain. . Gumpbo. ) = ‘;‘*‘E "\ ;:- "ri:“mtl:fi . - . To reduce the area of a nfl.d . MEELL: 0 3 e sctling of a jewel. . Determined not to be persuaded. RT 17. To obtain as the result of effort. . (:ofimm with: oppose. ” . ’A v 18. A rover 5. Reveal: display. ILL sac v WAS A SWELL PARTY ! ves mam! T TOLE RER WHEN 1 FIRST WENT IN S@ t WOULDN' FORGET! . Trees of the genus Taxus. T EVEN SAID."NO. THANKS, T COULDN' EAT ANY MORE ICE CREAM.” TELL PUDDINHEADS MOTHER THAT YOU 19. A walled town in Thuringia. . Distant. 20. Pouring; sprinkling. " Delineste. 22. An American inventor. | Topas humming bird. 24. A gamecock’s steel spur. . A European fresh-water fish. 25. In India, a peasant. . Meditate. 26. Obliterate. 11. Colors. 5 29. A village in Pas-de-Calais Depart-| 12, The bow:. combining form. ment, France. | 13. A conjunction. 33. The bitter vetch . Wise. 34. A ridge of glacial gravel, . A cupola. 36. Masculine pers . Sylvan. 37. Lineage; . One of the large blocks inte which 39. Roman - glacier ice breaks. 41. South American wildcat. A suburb of Warsaw, Poland. 42. Chief town of Guam. 44. Contradict. 46. A nephew of Abraham 47. A health resort in Bohemia ing to kinship. 49. An Irish dramalist; 1672-1729. . Given by word of mouth: law, 1. Solar disk 32, Growing out. 62. To stop from fermenting by some |35 Japanese gold eoin. admixture, | 38. Extended B3. Suitry. ). Musical rattles used in the worship 56. Plundered: robbed of Isis. 60. Excited with interest. 43. A town in Italy. 61. Farewell 43. A cese for carrying small articles. . Tibetan priest | 48. To bespatter. . Heraldic bearing 50. Use. 5. Impressive: simplified spelling. . Macerate. . A government in European Russia.| 53. Philippine peasants. s . A demon. 35. Any assumed character. ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE | 56 Past of & flmd“‘,w_ . To diminish by taking away a little at a time. . Ostrichlike bird:- var. b . Split pulses. 62. Female kangaroo. . Masculine personal name. . Plecged: hist. . In anclent Greece, a clan accord- 1931 Ny TRIBUNE INE 1 FELT FER MY PANTS . THEY WAS M SHOES.. i THEY WAS GONE. FER A MINUTE 1 DIDNT KNOW WHERE 1| WAS By S.L.HUNTLEY Drinking From the Saucer. | While drinking from one's saucer is | now a shocking breach of. etiquette, it | was at one time quite the approved | thirg to do, as shown by a recent ex- | hibition of eld-time glassware. Some | vears ago the china set was not com- | Dlete unless part of it included tiny | “cup plates,” in which the eup was placed while the dinner consumed his | coffee or tea from his saucer. The cuj lwn for the purpose of protecting the Thriller. table top or tablecloth from the heat and drip of the cup.