Evening Star Newspaper, January 26, 1933, Page 34

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erub waLL - or Aw- DAISY!! COME MERE QUICK ') HERE'S of A PICTURE OF TWIDDLE best fo life IN THIS PAPER ! HE'S (It metters not how '"Q?ficm oF Avnesian small his place) ® Is doing more than " he can know To help the poor old humen race. N '\i\\\{' <N\ 2 gsglz—%!fcr BALMY, SiR — : B T e e e WHEEE . 1 GoT SEe? SeE WHAT Youre = = PuzzZLES ISNT HE! HE DOESNT OUT OF ALPABET ConsSomme E-M-U THAT TiME— Tg:ggxwlr You LET THE. SEEM QUITE ALLTHeRE ! ALL AT ONCE T GET A HolD oN You One Little Word After Another. €T Ak b Mecarred “WHAT DO YOU USUALLY DO DURING YOUR VACATION?" “LOOK FOR A JOB.” LETTER-OUT By Charles H. Joseph. OF COURSE, IF | CAN'T TAKE ANY CHANCES I'VE GOT TO HAVE H NOT A WITNESS- NOT A IT WAS SOME ©' PICKIN' TH' WRONG BIRD- @| PRoOF- REAL PROOF- LOST BUTTON, OR A PIECE ORDINARY JUST CAUSE | DON'T LIKE 'VE BEEN OVER EVERY E O’ TORN COAT, ON A NAIL= et Ot sndle T i THING, IT'D BE SOMEBODY, IS NO REASON INCH O’ THIS BLOCK= E \ NOTHIN'= BUT THAT'S O.K.= l DIFFERENT- TO SAY HE DID IT~ | | THERE'S TH' AUTO TRACKS IT'S NOT BRAINS THAT COUNT BUT THIS 1S AND SANDY'S BLOOD- A 2 SO MUCH IN CATCHIN' SERIOUS- [ BUT NOTHIN' ELSE- & CRIMINALS= IT'S SEEIN' EVERY | /%4 THING AND NEVER GIVING UP- FEATHERED | PSEUDO | I Letter-Out for a sucker list. CALOYER Letier-Out for what Americans would call a wise guy. 1 2 3 g B ISRALI | | Emay ' Letter-Out and trains use these. flated. BLUBBER | Letter-Out and it is easily de- 5 | Remove one letter from each word and rearrange to spell the word called for in the last column. Print the letter in center column opposite the word Never you have removed it from. If you have “lettered-out” correctly you find it . as you enter a theater . Give UP. Answer to Yesterday's LETTER-OUT. Letter-Out and it will fall to CLUMBERS es. CLUMBERS | S | s = = = U Letter-Out and the model did it. < s i , POSED ! NO USE TALKING - IT'S BEAUTIFUL [ AR, A NATIVE EARMER. }— > 620D MORNING, SIR, How D T AT f UP HERE IN MAINE AFTCR A }'mwt AN GGT Some R 2 DEEP Do You FIND, I l etter-Out for a German city. | PSEUDO BLINDER SNOWSTORM - ESPECIALLY INEORMATION ABOUT = o BERLIN | X -~ WHEN THERE'S THe DEPTH OF LAST ' S ' Letter-Out and it's not coarse. | - /) S0 MUCH OF NIGHT'S SNowFALL INFERS et I Y l Letter-Out for a Scot's child. BINARY e (Copyright, 1033.) Daily Cross-Word Puzzle ES sue GOOD NIGHT NURSE! MAMIE, MEET W?J OH-1 AND HER | USED TO AND AFTER ALL THESE MRS. PRATT MY HAS MSETH BEFORE, i WEAR MY YEARS, WHEN EVER I'D THINK MW Al MisS SCHMALTZ. THAT'S '\ nars ano OLD LADY SCHMALTZ WAS THE BOARDER- AS A MATTER RIGHT | & PERFUME. TOUGHEST WOMAN IN THE OF FACK MRS.PRATT MAMIE . o6 WORLD TO GET ALONG WITH— 5&‘2?93502&‘23 _:.c%r - THE ONLY THOUGHT I H:D To ; I ) : CHEER ME UP WAS THAT BvY | §i7 il | __FOR HER. ECONOMICAL . MRS. PRATT WAS WORSE | ! 3 AND HERE W/ILLARD L / | G ¢ SHE IS Between the Devil ~ and the Deep Blue Sea. . Western State. . Renounce. . Harsh throaty noises. . Downcast. . To store in a silo. . Pilgrim settler of New England. . Received. . . A fish having a compressed body. . To utter abruptly. Moorish tabors. Projects. . Epidermis. A ;«m of a finial. . Legendary bird of prey. - Feminine name. ¥ Yo%mgd cous. i Shoots from the base of stems. e . Indisposed. Unit of length used in expressing | MY NAME 18 ' " Foint of low land. 5 glistances of stars. G — GEORGIE SNOW . Ncant Foo‘_r:-_ 6n:°$a%°sueLDNnbs " Run_aw: Ficld: German. AN’ MY POP DRIVES THE : YOURE MOR: HA Young pig: dial. Eng. i ips the blubber from a whale THAT IN ONEY Trifler. Z . Y X SiIX YEARS. . Young swan. Reduce. = = - . To fly without flapping the wings Feminine name. Presiding officer of & committee. . The universe. . Wading bird. . Dance step. . Bird of prey. Ireland. The Welsh onion. Bench. . Metric meacure. . Hard . Japanese !'fll‘? xpala;g Queen of fairyland. . That which draws. chioride. 1. One that forces air violently "W through the nose. . Diminutive suffix. . Austrian copper_colns. | - . - ~EH'I"“’_‘§M“;'I"£‘ fixed appearance. | Diq @-esks Play Feot Ball? . i g | e rea | S 7 7 Ny s | i B e ~ : e s |t i 3 i & wiLL TAKE. THIS !:fiv;:'nmg tone or vigor., | the old Romans played a game with A \A{Hl‘\"- WOULDNT LISSEN U o HERE WOMAN FER b el | en inflated bladder. When the game E O 4 \ it LA onisingghopm of atc wes first in‘roduced into England there S \ 1 V S ? Wi was no lirit as to the number of play- R ers and the game was played in the open coun'ry with the goal posts many | miles t Several kings of England | endeay to suppress the game on| lflhs ground that il interfered with the 's b L ef prohery, which was re- i as essenticl for the country's L UuNTLEY defense. | { R iz Lives in Perpetual Daylight. Th | The Awctic tern travels from one e enl of the es= h to the other. Its an- Forrer nu-l ri-rotion coers 11,000 miles. e Tari of the time they are living bsyond 2 t tic ciicle whore the cay lasis | X m After this they fiy he Anta-ctic regions to experience | another long day. The oaly darkness | they encounter is in their migrations over the tropical regions,

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