Evening Star Newspaper, February 26, 1932, Page 39

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1932. I I The CHEERFUL CHERUB| MODEST MAIDENS . GUP N "o, & wovis Just think of the | HE SAYS every THING 1 . | > hundreds of minutes | OKay , anp 'ma:/r THey It tekes to muke WILL ARRWE To-MorRow \‘ d‘&y— eyre timy and BEAT IT! EDDIE SAYSY . VA N HIS TEIEGRAM THAT Bino WAS FOUND IN A MOVING VAN [ NOwW THAT I THINK OF 7, S, THAT Bi6 THERE WAS A VAN IN_FROWT \| PARASITE wWiLL B OF THE HOUSE THAT Dany! ON GUR HANDS BINO MUST HAVE CRAWLED FOR T™HE ReEST oF INTO T — WELL, THEy) | HIS LIFE ! IM BE HERE TO-MORROW ! Sick oF 1T i WHY DOES HE PiCk ON US WHY DOESNT HE Go campP AT @OOPY MD:TuLies P Y MIND 131 HADE UP — | wiex HE ARRWES TO-MORROW I GOING To TELL HiM TD Nove THAT ON! HES GRAFTED WIS, LAST MEAL IN THIS House —'AwD Clarice May | Change Her MIGHT KNoW SHED BE LATE —1'LL STEP IN OUT'OF THE WET TRY T BE oN AT .fl@@fl@ TiME For oncE | | ! EVERYTHING MUST BE SoLo 1, i HEY, V1, Look | | Gor A Bone HANDLED = HUNTING KN v ALWAYS THE WAY — WHEN " Fol oy 35 caes! IM ON TiME, HE ISNT T 2-26, U ez “THAT WAS THE HEIGHT OF SOMETHING OR OTHER WHEN THE ENGLISHMAN ASKED GANDHI WHO HIS TAILOR IS!" LETTER-OUL By Charles H. Joseph. DONY TEWL. ME THAT BYG BLONDE LOVES ANNIE FOR HERSELF ALONE - SHE'S A SMOOTH CUSTOMER., PLAMNIN' "UP TO TH' KID—~ AND THERE'S NOT A THING WE CAN DO To sSToe 1 T- I IT WERE ONIN OLINER. VD BE SORRKM; BUT, AFTER. ALL, HE'S OF AGE AMD OLD ENOUGH To LOOW OUT FOR HIMSELF - ®BuT \ _CANT STAND SEBING THAT NOUNGSTER' FUTURE RUINED - * I NEAN = SHE HAD HER OUT AGAIN ALL NESTERDAN AFTERNOON — SURE -~ ANNIE THINKS SHES GRENT - | WHATT KID WOULDNT,_FALL FOR THAT LINE?Z THE WORST OF IT \S, OLWNER SEEMS TO BE FALLWNG MADDENS | [ | Emma e e lmmuamm CIPHERS i PLOCE W Town - % | AumosT for in the last column. 1 6 10. 14. 15. 16. 17 18 20 CESSATION | SCATTER | I STARK Remove one letter from each word and rearrange to spell the word called Print the letter in center column opposite the word you have removed it from. 1f you have “lettered-out” correctly it will spell crude place in which to live. I Letter-out and they're divisions. Letter-out and they were the custom in saloons. Letter-out and cultured folk are interested in them. Answer to Yesterday's LETTER-OUT. TRAMPED I tter-out and it checks the raft in a_stove. D, Letterout and the conference MEASURED CRIMEA SEMINAR PIRATES [Al | ! [N |11 began again. R! ESUMED Letter-out and you see him with & mace. MACER Letter-out and they use them in war. ARMIES and it helps us do our T PRAISE Letter-out work bette: (Copyright, 1932.) . Less. . A military signal. . Box. . Exclusively. . Description of simple, rustic life. . Errand boy. . Turn aside. | Fawning for favors. Funeral ceremony. Profoundly respectful . Organic_portion of soil Graceful dance. . Superficial extent. . Liquid of pungent odor and harsh taste . Small glass bottle. . Ascend. . Withhold from. . Sharpness 2. Rich brown pigment. Sidelong look. 7. ng. Nymph of the hills. Down. . Artificially produced. . Holly. Engraved writing paper. . Poorly balanced. . Antitoxin Extremity. ANSWER TO YESTERDAY' PUZZLE. LESIEN EATERS) L) VI . Jewish month. . Funeral pile. . Member of a European race. . Curved figures. . Thin metal plate. . Ripening. . Right-hand page. . Slender bristle . Central American peninsula. . Administer confession and absolu- tion. . Pertaining to grandparents. 27. To be borne. . Small, greenish-yellow fruit. . Egyptian god of the dead. European bird. 5. Woodland landscape. Mexican wildcat. . Pishpond dam. Walk about idly. Be successful. To measure. . An insurgent. . Baffle. | 50. Brink 2. Rope or leather thong with a noose. . Annoys. Face of a timepiece. Irish king of the twelfth century. . Operatic solo. . Peruse. . Jewel. i Captured Sword Returned. | After 17 years a German officer who was captured near Ypres has been | traced by the captor and his sword re- turned. Baron Wilhelm von Lersner, heading & German patrol in 1914, was | taken prisoner after a lively fight with British troops under the command of Lieut. Marix. The British officer handed back the sword after the fight, | but the baron asked him to keep it | until after the war. Marix, who lost & | leg while flying during the war, learned | recently that the baron was working in a Berlin bank. - — Irish Spurn New Homes. | Claddagh, the picturesque fishing vil- lage in Galway, may not be abandoned after all. For generations the interest- | ing people, with their traditions of Spain and the Gael, have lived there, and the present generation likes the place. Recently the Pree State gov- | ernment offered to build & new vil | for them, and the Claddaghites at first were enthusiastic, but after estima the extra taxes and rents, they ri | to desert their old thatched cottages | for comfortable houses with slate roofs. . France's population Jjow is nearly 42,000,000. 2 On the The Old Folks Were Wrong. A DOESN'T IT WORRY YOou TO HAVE THE DOCTOR PLAY o GOLF SO MUCH ! FREEMAN | - In No Danger. By > 6.L HUNTLEY Inventive Mind. HATED TO COME WOME - YOU'REjAS PP iekiasiscumion A + > ‘t Wi 3e | | (A MAEQ!FD~ We MIGHT . WHY SHOULD 1 WORRY BECAUSE My HUSGAND DAY ? l Copyrigit; 1937, by Publk Lndger HEY BUMP! REMEMBER THE TIME YOUR SISTER GOT MARRIED AN’ WE GOT ALL THE ‘CAKES AN JELLY BEANS FOR. OFTEN WO':I*P.$ IF SHES HAPPILY MARRIED PLAYS GOLF EVERY /T T srouLo Tk Yoo 4 V) WOULD BE IN CONSTANT FEAR. DIDN'T YOU READ ABOUT TRE MAN IN MEYICO CITY WHO MADE A PERFECT SHOT AND DROPPED DEAD ? SHE CERTAINY €O TOLWOR D /) A PERFECT SHOT WiLL /) NEVER MAKE ME A 71 WIDOW. HE HAS BEEN PLAYING FOR TWENTY YEARS AND HE HASN'T SHOWN THE SLIGRTEST s\/vg"row\ OF A PERFECT WELL, ROLY ' SMOKES! SHE : CANT HAVE THERES ONEY ONE THING ABOUT T SHE DONT LIKE! THATS HER WP/ @932 Ny TRBUNE, INCT .| pADEUMMED / TARNATION ©/

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