Evening Star Newspaper, September 20, 1928, Page 43

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TOX, D. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 19%8° GOk DERR fiela T BE A K \ : GOLLY! WHATA THEY TRAILING TE € welL WORRIED ABOVT THert SULIE! I THINK HERRING IF IT ISNT THOSE FOR ? THEY MUST THiNk Tn Sone ~ THIS THING IS GIVING, BEDTIME STORIES ‘r'wrces' % et Sust ACourie || o aoys At A Where are the songs | | : oF NUTS FROM Some LOOK AT TH' SWeLL BUS N e G‘g“ 1 1 vope THEY Ja that people fordot . Bo0BY HATCH! ’ E 1 o T e _Bure e OFF BY ‘ Bobby Coon Grows Angry. from under his . He knew what| |Hundreds of vears 2 1 ! e it was. It was Whitefoot's tail. He B ei T et sharter st knew then that that hollow was so o 7 ~—Old Mother }l}nlnn. small that Whitefoot was having hard | |Ace “they the ones i 2 work to keep out of reach. Two or A . Inside a hollow fog crouched White- | three times he felt the touch of fur, but trees ;mq at mg‘\{ foot the Wood Mouse. It was & small | there was nothing he could get hold of. whisperin: > log.l and it was a very small hollow.|It was very exasperating. Yes, indeed, P! 3 Whitefoot had darted into it through a | it was very exasperating. He pulled his knothole that was just big enough for|arm out. him to squeeze through. “Come out of there!” he commanded. Goofy I s a lucky thing for me that this|“Ill get you, anyway, S0 you may as o old log was right handy,” said White- well save me the trouble of pulling you Gettin, foot to himself as he pulled his long|out.” < a g tail in after him. “Bobby Coon would | Of course, Whitefoot didn't come out. Scared have had me, I'm afraid, if. this old log | He simply tried to make himself smaller . hadn’t been right here.” than ever. He was terribly frightened. A moment later Whitefoot was by no | How he did wish that that hollow was - ' 3 means sure that Bobby Coon wouldn’t { just a little bit larger. 1If he could only — = v have had another inch he would 4 . have felt entirely safe! How he did i : s e S 3 ¥ pe— 3 , . e L Was e ‘ . >\ = : - WE HUNTED i : e LOHZ Gaés wish hbencfiuld Shgnl‘lct!tl Yes, Whitefoot |, was a dly scares le Mouse. 4 G Bobby Coon reached in with his other e el i WHEN L WAS UISTING L [ staes, auaiL, and fole this ?-??ta:fdbf:‘.:{"m‘;e T ERE, MESCALY (™AW, WHEN TH AT LORD TARBUCKETS : HARES AND cripes! ™HEY before, he just touched Whitefoot once WHAT Do NoU. FeaLLSEpsol operd (| HONTING LOPEE 1\ ! | ; PHEASANTS _ oW DONT GIVE THEM i O e aabay Coon gave a yelp ot pain \SHOOT MOSTLY f uP WE 60 BEAR | | ENGLAND-AH THERES | THERE'S REAL POOR FOLKS IN gy =l 7 |and yanked hie arm ouc of there in 8 HUNTIN' AU SHooT| [\WHERE HUNTING 18 AliaT HUNTING - WE FURRINY' COUNTRIES ! esr M. & o o = urry. 00! 2l en one of 3 Tl TR Bobty's fngers. Yes, sir, Whltefoot A FEW RABRITS LA REROr 5°:°: A ?Tm| ! A EVEN BREAK y used his sharp little teeth. N : i HEASANTS i ¢ My, such a rage as Bobby Coon flew DIERE ATALL 00 THEVS 93 'A//l / into! led d and|$. o 1’ H d I 7 ///.{ gy e o o gt | LHUNTLEY Witk things to Whitefoot. But Whitefoot noticed that he didn’t put his arm in there again. Then Bobby began to AR claw at that old.log. He was trying to I 7 tear it apart. But he soon found he | 11, couldn’t do this. That old log was not old enough and decayed enough. Then “] WONDER IF I COULD PULL HIM | he tried to roll it over. He thought| (ondip OUT OF THERE.” there might be an opening on the under nditions side. He pulled and he hauled and he| Abroad, have him, anyway. Bobby had seen|hauled and he pulled. As I said before, » just ‘where he went. He came over to|the log was a small one. Bobby found the old log and sniffed at the knothole. | that he could move it. It wasn't heavy. Of course, he got his nose full of the | Presently it suddenly rolled over, so scent of Mouse. That scent was so|that the knothole was down against the strong_that Bobby knew that White- | ground. Whitefoot was a prisoner. ;‘oot c.ouldn( be very far inside that| «If I can’t get in you can't get out,” ollow 1og. He suspected that it was|growled Bobby Coon, and licked the o I could pull bim out ot | B o et e had very well satisfied with what he ha pDon =T = cEE e there. R get my claws into | done, Bobby Coon headed for the EFF, TH'S GIFT FRoM ATA;“; F"‘Pé“x OFFOR"EEC;“ = éCFF S RIGHT, AETER HE'S = ", - o e R iTio | TATELIng Brock-to washl Lis handh for, YoU OUCRWHELMS & ONE EROM THIS PLANGT So he ‘s‘h’“‘ through the knothole | you know, Bobby Coon is very neat. MG WHY, A MOUING |[ WHEN T KICK=-0€ 5] T can STILL Have == ) - L, ABoUT THAT TALL AND, o T s e B MR T I e T T v 1*1 PleTURE BROJECTING || YOU'LL ALWAYS HAVE 5| ‘im with Me ON THe Ty SV ARG o ST R0Z B ok aroual aory Carefully. Onos | Lo iy oat Bosd Monme.s U MACHINE LikE THIS / |A LIFE-LIRE PICTURE |5} SCRECAIs THASS JUST : €osTS AN AWFUL 0F YOUR LiTTLG PALE LiKe anrgg MNReAL LIFE, WELL, TATAe T SCRATCHING HIS something smooth and round slipped out (Copyright. 1928.) d I y f Z GOTTA BE GOING: BCAN LIKE J sf =L THAT. B! 24 BUOD FISHER LITTLE BENNY Abe Martin Says: BY LEE PAPE. Pop was smoking to himself and I was doing my home work agenst my will and ma was looking over the foto- graph alban, saying, Wats ‘this empty space, wares that picture gone to, I know exackly wat picture it was too, it was that perfeckly adorable baby pic- ture of Benny lyjng on & big bear rug, who took that picture out of this alban? Not gilty, pop sed. Me not saying anything, and me sed, Benny, did you remove that picture for any reason? Yes mam, holy smokes, ma, thats a | awful "'ifi“«"' sippose anybody was to i Q z el S, b, . o, = that, why shouldent they? ma sed, and HELLO-~NO, YOU'VE GoT Wl / HUH %% - \F 1 ENE You MY I-H;lg‘_ ougE PRgMI:gl?B'l‘b WRON - DDRESS You'tL TOOT YourR ST DOCR A Low e weonc pRiicer 3§ THE HORN TWIKE FOR ME? I sed, Well G wizzickers, ma, do you g v Bl pebT ' , HORN RS You PASS Tis -1 CAN'T TALK fl THis 15 THe HOME OF ORN AS YO i TO ANYONE - = f| WNDY RIEY THE BAWL AFTERNOON 22 = WELL, ER-/ MUST BE A SWELL FELLER TM LATE FoR PLAYER - - - -WHATS THATH } —--- HAVE You A L WONDER WHAT ; PRACTCE YoU UKE MY Noice 2 =~ PENCIL HANDY ? J72*° KIND OF A ml‘ wonder if President Coolidge looks ALREADY p ! CAR HE Mw}%m or whether he just - . % HAs ¢ 'n_havin’ 3 & quarter :?a“m -h:uum%% L"&‘.; KENKLING (Copyright. 1928.) g Credit System There Are Al Kinds of Horns. Eii EE. gEd t to buy a pair of shoes, a sty- and nice, , viewing them blues—I found I lacked the . I only had three bucks or four to make my bids, and it smackers more to buy skids. “We'll erchant said, sign e p i z 1P You'RE ALONE; RARRY, NOTHING DOING— YOU'RE I'D LIKE 0 PLAY AROUND| |00 GOaD — 1 HEARD 1 CANY Go ON LIKE ALL ABOUT You. TiS= NOBODY WILL YoU'RE A 70 SHOOTER PLAY WITh ME SO - ILL JuST LET THE W€ Coupge MEMBERS OF The SHoT 72 ON w GALLOPING GOO::w BA TCD'\IS‘!S'TED COUNTRY CLUB Ki 3 HOLES k) HOW 1 SROT IN The - D THERE W, . Eitner Mary or Anue are gong.” 587 | Thes 1 ~70's ON My VACATioN N 2:‘ N ir :E— l ing. \ 'h:)ae x:\nlspmm;l.meed‘: Da'zicn te; | oy g, (i § TN e T erred to “2.” | 1ot been paid for yet. /7 = - | 8, on;nn‘x?pflxl;\dfi.u%‘:in r::r',l:;o hasty, | cents_@ '?:k- and should payment 23] { o a it i C ) RsE £ 2 i, it »hasty. | fall, Tl have him up before the beak | | Dn LEE ord study: ~Use & word three times :lnd sue him for the kale’ If I were SICNED, d and it is yours.” Let us increase our shoes - vocabulary by mastering one word each . Today’s word, Sensuous; easily affected through the senses. “It was thing the sensuous enjoyment of life. ready yet t the d e AR Perhaps I'll. come around again somes.aythapecup‘ctunv ‘scrap | footwear, to your store, when I can of paper.” Maybe s0; but that’s more| bring iron men—but surely not to our liking than a scrap of nations.— WALT MASON. Atlanta Constitution. (Copyright, 1928.) POKER PORTRAIT —By WEBSTER. BANANA I - e " ICE CREAMZ [ Wty MOTGET ¢ e . c&“ 4 8 WHAT S TURN OUT see MWt | Py / g P e 3 i bl 43 o i it g o i 5&E Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. i xgug EE a Ta g2 g ‘Words often misused: Do not say gage i fels g P THAT’S A PORTEAIT ; SKETCH oF DIC WHY_You SEE. | FOUND DUMBUNNY : P ENobeh 1] ek & 1 ‘“Hi"flh INE Vx,., %f:gxu o )0 % Wil htid £2 That Failed.

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