Evening Star Newspaper, August 3, 1931, Page 28

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GF COURSE, MR, FLATHEEL, Inf TAKING UP LATIN, IT 1S NECESSARY TO HAVE SOME' HUMM~ ER- I SHOULD SAY ANTONY'S DATES WITH CLECPATRA LETTER-OUT By Charles H. Joseph SE ADOUT PARIS WITH My USBAND UNTIL 3.A.M, IN THE FUTURE FERDINAND WILL TAKE HIS LATN AND G REE LESSONS HERE IN THE HOTEL ! SHARP ’T:cuéu:.' I WOULONT WANT || 7o BE FeERDINAND Letter-out and be switched. way, i mind composin Letter-out and & salor spins ‘em. | JMJ‘P retorts s | T havent got THUNDERS SYRIANS BRITONS SINKERS tte) d they are paths for | it | ‘Letter-out and use a mouth wash. Letter-out and beware of her smile. MARCHERS 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 they are good Pplaces to get a skate on. ; Answer to Saturiay’s LETTER-OUT. OH, MRS. GREEN! MY KID SISTER HAS MUMPS AND MEASLES ToGETRER. AINT TRAT GRAND ? : AND THE DocTor THINKS MAYBE IiL AND | 3 AND OUR HoUSE WAS ON FIRE GET EM, Too, GEE, | CANT HARDLY WAIT! o AND THE DARN FIREMEN PUT ITouT 1 DoNT THINK THAT LHTLE ODPISTZ BoY CAN BE RIGHT IN THE HEAD. HE WAS SAYING THE MoST AWFUL— restFUL | F couPLER | L STITCHER | | | E |R STIFLE NOTICERS Letter-out and It's & heavy coat. I ULSTER Letter-out and were trying to o't with our losses. RECOUP Leiter-out and do i¢ In the mora- | STRETCH Letter-out snd & strong man doey it LIFTS Letter-out and 1t's & lower and I an upper berth. 5 SECTION (Copyright; 1931.) OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL Summer Reading. Summer time is the ideal time for yeading. There are long hours for Jeisure to be spent in pleasant occupa- tions. Reading is one of the best. But "what book!o:;mll the childrén read? Any that are 5 I have’ read the Junior Literary Guild's books and they are very good. Any of them. The bookshops will int them out to you. Then there is ?fie collection called the Little Library. These books are good. They are usually short stories by well known authors. You will find the books fine for travel- ing companions, because they are light “snd easy to carry. The old favorites ~are always good. By old favorites I “mean Stevenson’s “Treasure Island,” ~Kipling’s “Captains Courageous,” O'Neill's “Tonty of the Iron Hand,” Alcott’s ..books for girls, “The Wizard of 0z,” *Pinocchio.” For the older boys, remember “Sons of Seven Cities,” by Holland; Hallock's * *The Boy Who Wa: "The Wind in the I'Willows,” by Grahame. I always have an increase of faith in a boy who likes {“The Wind in the Willpws.” j He is sure to like Hudson's “Long Ago and Far Away,” that most lovely of auto- “biographies. The rhythm of its prose is a delight in itself. The older girls would like “A Daugh- ‘ter of the Seine,” “It Happened to Me,” “Two Penniless Princesses.” This last “book is one of Charlotte M. Yonge's, and - its historical background of tales of war and intrigue and its charming romance will delight the hearts of schoolgirls. Both boys and girls who are past the childhood stage and just beginning to ~read books :;h a wmrer note will enjoy .“*The Bo) 0 Was.” For f.hey younger boys and girls, I find that there is little difference in their that will please those ‘who know the first one. This one adds Angus, a ter- rible terrier, to the delightful donkey. Don’t miss it. “Jane's Island” has room for_boys on it, too, and they will enjoy a trip there as much as Jane does. For the younger children who read for themselves, try “Alice.” It helps the beginners to read a book through if you will read a little of each chapter to them. They can read the talking pieces and you can read the descriptions, adapting as you go along if you think wise. These children like “Pinocchio,” “The Wizard of Oz,” fairy tales and Bible stories. If you are in doubt about books for the Summer, consult the librarian in the children's department of the public library. The librarian is trained to her work. She knows all about books for children and where they are to had. She can tell you why & book is good for a child and why it will not do for your particular charge. Your library can give you far more service than you have yet asked of it. Reading is about the best use of leisure time th: children can make during the Summer holidays. There is no better way of setting a good back- ground for style, behavior, tastes, aims and culture than the way of good books. (Copyright, 1931.) Frozen Dessert. Whip one pint of cream stiff. Mix one cupful of powdered sugar with one and one-half cupfuls of orange juice and one tablespoonful of lemon juice and add to the whipped cream, then fold in half a cupful of chopped green capned cherries, including the juice, and one-fourth teaspoonful of salt. Pour into the tray of a mechanical refriger- ator or pack in ice and sslt and freeze Like Son, Is Still True. [ SHARK ANDY NOPE=-HENRE HIS CROWD [STILL SELLING Bill, the Detective. MADAM, WHAT REASON HAVE YouU FOR A DIVORCE ? THAT'S THe BesT REASON T HAVE " HEARD THIS YeARr! t know. HE INHERITS _IT. HIS FATRERS A WALL STREET BEAR AND ALL BAD NEWS LookS Goeb To Him. © Bec THINKING = WHN CAN'T YOu PO A LITTLE DETECTINE WORK \LL GIVE NOU HER ADDRESS - SEE HOW SHE'S GETTING ON- \'VE GOT T WNOW IQUICKER THAN YoU CAN SAY BUSINESS COMPLETELY DIWVORCED Now? JUST LEAVE \T “TO ME, QLWER =Ll FIND QUT ALL ABSUY HER = U'LL CHECK UP ON MAW GREEN AND JAKE AND THW WHOLE OUTFIT= \T'S A CINCH = OT QUITE. YOU'RE DWORCED IN RENOG — MARRIED IN NEW YORK- LEGALLY WED IN CALIFORNIA - A DEBUTANTE IN OHIO=, YOU'RE DEAD IN ARIZONA ~ AND You AINT BORN IN TEXAS - .tastes in books. They will like “Robin | for several hours, stirring once during and Tito.” There is & new robin book the freezing period. a Lesson in Geography. HOW MANY TIMES MUST 7 1 EXCLAIN TAAT TueRE ! 1S NO TOMBSTONE. IN A -TOMBSTONE TOURNAMENT ? — ITS N _ JUST A NAME, I~ A MERe— THE NEAREST -THING To A “TOMBSTONE IN THE TOURNAMENT 1S: -THE— 7 / //’////'/ INSCRIPTION, " SO AND SO DIED HERE " //7’//, WHICH 1S ON A LITTLE CARD WRICA THE [///] Ve PLAVER PLACES ON TAE SPOT WHERE 4 ] ALL _COMES To REST AFTER USIN “TAE LAST OF WIS ALLOTTED STKZOKES.‘ 1 WANT “To BuYy A TOMBSTONE. THE SMALLEST You HAVE. ONE -THAT WILL LOOK WELL ON A LIBRARY TAGLE OR ON -THE MANTEL OVER A FIREPLACE TOURNAMENT SATURDAY, DID You GRING 1T ROME AS 1T REQUESTED P 1 Don'T GELIEVE You ! |: EY CALLIT . Principal commodity. . Hawallan garland. . Flowerless thallophytic plant. . A kind of tree. . A flower. . Against: prefix. . Vain fancy. . A feature of the face. . American electrician and physicist. . Botanical garden of trees. . Conjunction. o1 . Painful spots. 62..Earth: Latin. By PERTOt 64, Javanese tree whose sap is poison- | GENg ByRNES . Frenzied. ous. . Archbishop of Canterbury. . Crude metal. . . Of today. lackthgrn. . Fellow of the Royal Soclety: . Cause to emerge. o ;J U“—’g . Thin, narrow strip of wood. = PUDDINHEAD TOOK MY DOG TO THE STORE. WITH ‘1M BROTHER PINHEAD IS CRYIN' HIS SYES OUT causE YOU TOOK s 0OG TO THE STORE WITH va! ‘TAINT HIS DOG ANYHOW! WE EACH OWN HALF ! . Exhibit_evil pleasure. . Greek letter. . Pathless. . Russian storehouse. Fifty-Fifty Pmposifioy. . Prong. . Division of & play. . Make love. . French article. . Terminate. . Ogles. 3 gvzlops in detall. Sinful. . Sea eagles. . Elementary part of a word. . Take over. .-AND SO,MY BELOVED FRIENDS..MY MIGHLY ESTEEMED CONSTITUENCY,1 SAY IN THE OFT REPEATED WORDS OF ANOTH / SPEECH OVER GREAT MAN , ‘ONE FOR ALL.-ALL FOR ONE’ .. WHAT WE WANT 7 DO IS RID OURSELVES OF SOCIALISM, ANARCHISM RADICALISM, SOVIETISM Al BOLSHEVISM ! _ Hm ] . I cosetcsarian B S 71 A AT HIT_.HOW BOUT THROWIN' IN RHEUMATISM T, 15 MAKIN . Brazilian coin. . . Original name of founder of the Hebrew race. v . Custodians. L . nal 57 Commonplace By e Lt SIL.HUNTLEY The “Isms” Have'lt. Engli banker and historian. . Round muscle of the shoulder. . Set of three. . Doctor: abbr. . Imitator. Part: Latin. Serf. . Soul: French.

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