Evening Star Newspaper, July 23, 1935, Page 28

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'B—12 MODERN MAIDENS &2 Py o1 e &7 A R Ramved 2% “HE ALWAYS SENDS ME SOMETHING ON OUR DIVORCE AN- NIVERSARY.” LETTER-OUT BY CHARLES H. JOSEPH. METEORS | TRUMPED | GODFREY | VILE | BORE | Letter-Out and it's some distance away. I Letter-Out and he unloads. Letter-Out and the crook did it with a check. l Letter-Out and you will compete. Letter-Out and you'll take some- | | thing not yours. 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 you have removed it from. If you have “Lettered-Out” correctly THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1935 TERRY, YOU'RE NQT \PLLLURLLLELY "GUILTY-~ ~WE'RE | THE ONLY ONE MURDERED AND I DIDN'T MR.BELL? L STEAL THE (] 0.8 Put O s by Publishers Syndicate MR. AND MRS. 1 JUST Love THESE QUEER oLD NEWS RerLS | YEAH; AND WHAT | YoURE WEARING WiLL Lok JusT AS QUEER.TEN YearS From Now LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE, r" YOU'RE_A ,PATRIOT, BUT YOU MUST BE PRACTICAL, CLA YOU KNOW THE [ THAT'S RIGHT, MR. § SLUGG, BUT-- Secret Operative 48 The Gay 90s Return REMEMBER WHEN THEATER USHERS USED To SAY, LADIES WILL PLEASE REMOVE THEIR LARGE HATS ¥ —By NORMAN MARSH (MIEANWHILE IN THE LABORATORY, DAN DUNN FINISHES HIS EXAMINATION OF THE LEADEN PELLET WITH WHICH BELL WAS SLAIN.” HM-M/ THIS BULLET WAS FIRED FROM A THAT'S RIGHT, KOP AUTOMATIC -~ | DAN, I AGREE WITH YOUR FINDINGS # WELL! T Looks Like HiSTory IS REPEATNG ITSELF | c»{r See A Time! ITS AN ouTRAGE! THAT'S IT! HES BIS- HE'S RICH AND SUCCESSFUL - BE HONEST NOW- Y OF ANYONE WHO HAS A LOT MORE THAN YOU HAVE= ISN'T THAT ? ER-- WELL- IT'S NOT EXACTLY FAIR THAT ANY MAN SHOULD HAVE SO MUCH= it will spell something a woman loves to be in. Answer to Yesterday’s LETTER-OUT. GROCERS PERSIANS | R PURPOSE GLEAsON | O| I Letter-Out and you need ‘em on MISTER | 6 l Letter-Out and he's at every ball game. SCORER Letter-Out and they are a plant I with 5-petaled flowers PANSIES o Letter-Out and let's eat. I | SUPPER Letter-Out and a fisherman does it. ANGLES TIRES (Copyright, 1935.) Daily Cross-Word Puzzle . Leaps. . Highest mountain in the Alps. . Sour. . Passage. . Keenly desirous. . Not one. . Restore to citizenship. . Verily. . Clocks in the form of a ship. . Olive tree genus. . Banish. . Baluster. . Accumulate. . A flowerless plant. . Corner. . Strikes. . One of the United States. . A large cask. . Feeler. . Everlasting. . A lure. . Exile. . One of the bears. Quench. . Frank. . Domesticated. . Meaning. . Disembark. Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle. [TIRIAIVIAL L BBIRIAIVIAID|O} [H/O|SAIN|NIARMRIE [P[1 IN[E [R] JAIB|UIT(TIEIDIAWE[SIO| w/ | INJISTPIRIAIYIE DINTI E INID[S IRTIO/P/E DI STHIAID) [DIEIEM IOIDIMGIL [ENIS] [TRIEIAITIEIDENSIO/ARIS] AIVIEISHISIPAIN] [BIAIRIEIDENTIWIAIDIDILIE] ILIE[DIMF EIE MSIE[EM]S] IME] [ETA] [HIA] INISEER] R EIVIEIRIEIS TERIEIFIERIEIE] (RIE[S1 [O[E[SIUSIEIEIRIE[S[S] Musical instrument. German river. Animals’ resting places. Turkish commander. Meshed fabrics. Printed cotton cloth. . Metrical foot. . Fellow countryman, . Arrow poison. . Lairs. CEamaawn 3 WS. . High priest of Israel. Short lances. . Enamel: French. . Love of country. . Headgear. . Artifices. . Uncanny. rules. . Court at Athens. . Scandinavian territorial divisions. . Caustic, . Related. . Hindu woman who cremates her- self on the funeral pile of her . Center of revolution. . Method of leather curing. . Solar disk. . Grant temporarily. . Woodland deity. —— Three Save $600 in Pennies. Deciding some time ago to make a trip to England during the jubilee traveled. They saved $600 in the small coins. In five metal-bound and sealed boxes, they took the pen- nies to the shipping office at Bris- bane and enchanged most of them for three tickets to England. The sale is said to establish a world’s record for fares paid in SAY, UNCLE Y WILLIE, DIDYOU f—= MENTION TO MAMIE ABOUT LORD OR PLUSHBOTTOM'S NEEDIN' #300%2 BAD TO MEET HIS INTEREST?P YAS AND DOGGONE 1T SHE SAYS SHE AINT INTERESTED GENRIL, MAY I PLEASE LEAVE 4 THE ARMY FOR A MINIT 2 I GOTIA GO HOME FOR SUMPN ' 0OC WAS JEST A-TELLIN' ME ABOUT OPERATIN' ON MILO BLODGETT m g 1 thus relieve the tedium — And if 1 add my two HAROLD GRI Triveng N WELL PERSONALLY AS LONG AS YOU'VE GOT TH' DOULGH, I SAY THAT THE SAY-SO OF IT HERE, BULLSEVYE® YOU MIND MY SWORD UNTIL | COME BACK TO WAR! 1 WONT BE A MINIT ¢ Rl vEAH? waAs IT A SUCCESS? AYBE MAMIE WiLL M E wiL LEND ME THE MONEV,) SONMETIMES SHE WAS Such - ITS BAE A CHANGEABLE §~ ANDTHEN DISPOSITION. ; IT'S WORSE. OF CHALKLIT - A, GENTLEMEN == THIS 1S ONE OF THAPPIEST DAYS OF MY LIFE! I¢

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