Evening Star Newspaper, March 27, 1933, Page 22

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON," D. (., MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1933. MODERN MAIDENS The Cheerful 'Ch;r"' and groan About the breaks I made last year To think that others do the same — We're =1l poor boobs together here. PUT A PoINT ON THIS PENCIL For M, WiLL You, Jos ? T 4 7T Wont Wrme NERE ARE A DozEN PENCILS T BEATS ALL! PRoviNG TikT Tie Penci INTHIS PRAWER NOVSE FULLOF PENCIS - oy W TS HousE IF PLACED Sorgy— | LEFT A AND NoT ole My Kmrg' A YES<AND ALL OF EM SHE Wil ENDTO END, WOULD REACH T NEED SHARPENING m‘mvsem:s,u.x f o IOCRACY, ALASKA ©-27 T4 P, 43 Bt Bt “YOUR FATHER SEEMS ANGRY ABOUT SOMETHING." “YEAH. HE'S JUST BEEN DOWN TO GET HIS LAWYER OUT OF JAIL.” LETTER-OUT By Charles H. Joseph IT'S ABOUT TH NO, BUT YOU'VE | WAS ONLY FOOLING=- A NEW Letter-Out for an opening. s CHURCH- IT NEEDS GOT MORE THAN PIPE ORGAN, EH? A SPLENDID OM, THERE VOU PAINTIN', AND A HUNDRED! ALL TH' REST OF IDEA- VES, INDEED- AS YOU ARE- I'VE BEEN NEW ROOF- TIMES TH' FOLKS IN COURSE X BAY, WHAT'S A FEW THOUSAND, Letter-Out and 1l hold water, LOOKING ALL OVER HA! HA! ARE HARD, BUT | CHILD, I'M TOWN- AND A MORE OR LESS® YOU MAY | | PTSgNPYEO:‘.L;V m;b NOTHING KNEW YQU'D BE NOT MADE NEW PIPE ORGAN COUNT ON ME, ANNIE- I'M - 1 GLAD TO TAKE WOULD BE SWELL, GLAD YOU CALLED T | Letter-Out and it's greased. YOU LOSE SOMETHING? CARE OF IT, AND DEPARTURE | ANUBIS 1 2 3| SADDLER | T WONT CoaT cew Tovsano, ([ eI 4 5 HUNDRED - BACTERIN BUT A FEW MORE OR LESS? I I Letter-Out and shoot with it. YEARNED | 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 | Jou have removed it frqm. If you have “lettered-out” correctly it will spell e road we don't like to travel on. I Letter-Out and he eame closer. Answer to Saturday’s LETTER-OUT. PROSIEST Part of troops SORTIES Letter-Out and e is & rester. REPOSER l P I Ietter-out for a maneuver om ROPERIES | | . Letter-Out_and these things oe- o : MALTSTER | L | #ght ) g cone on e e enonzea) T e s e, BN S T e vy | US THE FLNING ALL RIGHT - s Wemer e Lol AMATINRS L b Letter-Out and an explorer does h JusT ONE LEVATORS |O | i 2= = o= i N DIVE THOUGH! ROTUNDA | T | Heswlin, o e hos. them (Copyright, 1933.) Daily Cross-Word Puzzle 1 PONT kNow! | > | (T THINK 1TSS THE L | fLvine puck! IF YOU ASK ME, 5 LORD PLUSHBOTTOM, IT . WHAT A LAZY DON'T LOOK $O GOOD You - ¥ GOOD-FOR-NOTHING 1 AM! LAYIN' UP THERE ON { TK-TSR-TSK YOUR LAZY NECK AND ; T DON'T DESERVE TO EVER THE WHOLE TOWN OUT EVEN SEE THE CHARMING GIRL TRYIN' TO TRACK DOWN THE . AGAIN~— MY WORD. KIDNAPERS OF THE FUTURE : g’o un?lun(e headforemost. 1 Undeveloped shoots. 3 8 Loose-fitting garment. 5 Large ungulate. 10 To bend. 6 Having one side. 14 Shrub from which indigo is derived. | 7 Nothing. 15 Town in Jefferson County, Pa. 8 An article. 16 Averse to labor. 9 Kind of large jar resembling an 17 To present. amphora. 18 Heaped. 10 Chips of stone. 19 Displays ostentatiously. 11 A den. 20 Thin perforated metal used in de- 1132 113‘0&': of '-h;o r?lm 'l‘rsun;ent.e 5 E signing. open ico of ancient Greece. D e e paEE - (Smmssesany to the dura mater. o : Large body of water, 35 True to the fact. TALKIN’ s PUZTLE An'HE PEMALE vi g A constellation. TH ORMIN o 28 Before: prefix. - Lol : MOM eeneenn SHEEP ? BlanT 32 A Variegated chalcedony. 29 Rate of movement in music srarvtec! 36 At all times. 31 Previous to the exile, B.C. 600. 37 A verse of four measures. 33 Discarded broken rock. 39 A cap. 34 Abounds. 40 Lies or heels over. 35 To obliterate. 41 Aromatic beverage. 37 A light rap. 42 Not ready. 38 A conjunction. 44 Charity. 40 Kind of tree. 45 Indured. 43 The slayer of Remus. e. 44 Engages wholly. 47 Corpulent. 47 A grain. 48 A plan. 49 Proceeding from the Pope. 50 Beans of a certain kind. 61 Buildings where grain is ground. 52 Springing from true sentiment. 52 Genus of hemipterous insects. 56 The expression of a strong afirma- |53 To assert. tive by the negative of its opposite. 54 To become weary. 60 Pernicious. 55 A decoy. 61 A student. 57 Staple food of Hawail. 63 Rant. 58 Balanced. 64 Republic in South America. 59 Stitches. 65 Pertaining to an ares. 632 A vegetable. 66 To cgncg;t. - i Gt R, 67 Greek god of war. = 3 68 Inclines in opinion. England's Salt Field. W, CONFTET A — dt WAL, 1'LL BORROW o % EN HIS €9 Descendants. The Meadow Bank mine at Wins- YUH Th' LoaN OF i 4 KNOW THET TRUCK'S FOLKS'LL GIVE Down. ford, which was closed down in 1888 A NICKEL.. BUT MIND * 3 MOREN APT TO, § g‘fi?&f‘mmg after 33 years of activity, has been re- YUH, VUM GOTTA PAy MAKE HIM SICk ! cently reopened. Cheshire has for cen- ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE | turies been the center of a thriving salt-producing industry—in fact, since about 1670, when the main deposit at Northwich was discovered by an engi- neer prospecting for coal. But even for decades before that the natural N} brine springs of the region were the 8y source of an sbundant supply. 8.0 HUNTLEY As many as 107 mines have been | worked at Northwich. These are now led for the most part—the reason for the reopening of the Meadow Bank r_— 4] mine, the only one of three at Wins-| Liquid AN[O| ford that was not submerged. This mine was actuslly in production two weeks after the work of rehabilitation ] Was begun; and within seven months it was in complete running order and 7| equipped with every modern facility that has made rocksalt mining. as some one has expressed it, & clean, healthy and safe oocupstion, BREEEE $3E3

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