Evening Star Newspaper, April 14, 1933, Page 37

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| MODERN MAIDENS merrily sing — 2 > — 77 thousands of b %’ o ' ; N | WISK JoE TooK SPATS, Hey! For MET BETTER CARE OF HIS WELL-WHY NoT ? SHOES. MAYSE IF | BousHt Tae ANS HiM A PAIR OF SPATS— Fo;ryofrggi ’?wm-r 0100 7. A3 s Bt “FATHER SAYS HE'S AT THE OF HIS ROPE. BUT WHENEVER £ WANT TO SEE HIM HE'S TIED IN A CONFERENCE.” LETTER-OUT By Charles H. Joseph. DIMETER I Letter-Out and time sgain. Letter -Out and they looked ahead. EDUCTORS he got the sirl. EDUCATOR FIREMEN I Letter-Out for a valuable fur. SACHETS l Letter-Out and that's the way Letter-Out and he follows rap- idly. 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 have removed it from. If you have “lettered-out” correctly it will spell Fw‘y some of us like to get our beer. 8, Answer to Yesterday's LETTER-OUT. I C Letter-Out for stubbornness. BALKING I A l Letter-Out and & needleworker PLIES : =7 L WANT-TO FIND A PLACE |2 4 1 GUESS WE ARE UP HIGH ENOUGH SAR Dot Go_our THAT 1S NOT TOO DANGEROUS = “THAT LOOKS LIKE AGOOD PLACE [ FORMATION - 17 MIGH\ AND STILL GET A GOOD VIEW SISCRE =| For THE cAMERA, £E BREAK ANYTIME- ) : b : BLACKING ; ESPIAL GLADLIER ]G I uner-ouur;zl:“;:‘;m. Letter-Out for noise. CAROMEL | E | iyt ERISTIC ‘ R I Letter-out lcnl many peeple live (Copyright, 1933.) FER THE PITY SAKES ::: 2’&33?: R e e [ wHaT Do vouse ExpeckY WILLIE,SING (| FOR A DOLLAR AN' A TO SOMETHING I CAN BE SOMETHING WITH QUARTER A DAY OF, NO WISE CRACKS WHEN I A TUNE To iT! 7 SEEEC | DON'T WANT THEM, AND A a3, GRAND QPERA? \-rafi'““ PLEASANT, RESONANT VOICE THAT WILL KEEP QUIET WHMEN I DON'T MY STARS! SUCH A MAN! WELL, BELIEVE ME WHEN T CET MYSELF MARRIED :1'\.;"35 \WILLARD Lord Plush- bottom'’s . Most adjacent. . That which is apportioned. 17. . Fluid rock. . Feat. . Make senseless by blow. . Ballads. . Flower. . A continent. . Conducting. | 24. Lasted under use. Brave man. 5 {wnsplred with solemn wonder. . Want. . That which eorrodes. . One supported by another. 5. Father. . Tremulous. . Give out. . Ridge of rocks near surface . Woven snares. water, | 39. Unite in a league. . Join. . Network of nerves. . Insipid. . More peculiar. . Indian tent. . Match one against another. Exhume. . Asylums. . Yields. . Stanza. | 58. Level . Uncivil. 60. Mountain in Greece. 63. Pigmented iris layer _ Regretted. . Species of pepper. Numbers . Follow. | DS ES TN e e | Plant Knows Its Friends. 3 Ascended. In the wilds of Central America we . Irish. find a plant which at first glance ap- | . Dispatched. | pears to be able to think. It can dis- | Down. tinguish betweem friends and foes in 1. Variety of coffee. the insect world, encouraging those 2. Liquors. | that help it to survive by paying them | 3. Foregoing. handsomely with food, on condition that e e 2 i " they destroy the insects that would, if | ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE | ;o oq s tree hand, kil it. [ This plant is a species of acacia, | known as the bull's-head thorn. The { the at -animals, | but these do not prevent the leaf-cut- | ting ants from attacking it. These ants | select £o rapidly that it is soon stripped, | the leaves are carried back to their | nests and converted into leaf-mold, in which they grow fungi as food. The bull's-head thorn has discovered that there are other ants which do not |cut away the leaves of any tree they | ves, but will attack any es within their friendly ants the leaf cutters away, Sy S.LHUNTLEY ] HAVENTCHA GOT ANY OTHER NAME. BESIDES WOPPY 7

Other pages from this issue: