The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 26, 1919, Page 15

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G00 BYE OLD KITcHEA! Stove ! PANSY AM GOING HERE Pansy, IS 1ON A VACATION SOME ‘MONEY - IF THE GAS BiLt Comes, You PAY IT CANDY SHOP Z_ THIS CHAP IN HERE OPENS THE PAPER BAGS BY BLOWING aT, ‘ea eal INTO “THEM IIE = Log “ (m™ tH’ ONY ONE HERE, SHE MusT MEAN ME RECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS— f Tinocence Prove His Guilt! NS L WANT To KNow IP " (DONT TELL A SToRY— 1.DIDN Do ad es Aaa ~ {WHY You eur up my | MEZTDIDNT (A AGALONG SAID You WN, TAG WUZN'T : rom” . } FE 90d~jonesT? ; GOOD SILK HAT? =| f) TOUCH YER SILK fe. \ EVEN THERE WHEN / =" 7 = = V Pte i“ - ; a AL WAT, DOP =. 2 rk OE : a Sr WonesT ! ‘ 73 SMOKERS FIND SANDPAPEP PAN’ | GREAT AID IN GETTING A LIGHT \ Se MIGHT TRY GETTING FRESH WITH! VACK DEMPSEY ¥ e Swim? You do LOVE ©' PETE! HANE To WALK FOR ONE MINUTE IM GOING T You OuT A_HUNDRED)|| To RUIN THIS NEW BATHING DY YET f. " FEET BEFORE wens ee ne 2 q ! YCAN Swim ALT WATER ON (T, DO yout CLARICE?S S at Low TWE! THE BILL POSTER'LL COME IN~) To HIS OWN WHEN IT COMES TO PATCHING PANTS — Prenes one Har wir * owo- “THAT SUMP’ LIKE AN ENLARGED BUT WITH A SKI- MOBILE Ahead gehicdeg COPY OF WALKIN’ WTO ‘TL You SLIDE OVER STRETCH AN INCH THICK LISTENS LIKE IT Py ous STEEL CABLE ACROSS HIS WOULD GIVE A A CLOTHES- LINE WW As LUKE THIS ~ ih FRED veer HEH HE THE PATHETIC CASE OF GENT Hi WHOSE WIFE PATCHED HIS COAT ff WITH TH' COMIC PAGE 2) }— THE PAINT WEARS dee ~* | Pcy ARE CERTAINLY NoT |)" St GUPTING EXPENSES WHEN ‘AINT imal | cy E CERTAINLY N | | , NG EXPENSES ‘ieee | as FAIR % 3s) | 58 _ - gq | L THIS HAS BEEN KNOWN TO WORK ! ee Hewitt—Why didn’t you vote yes- terday? Jewett—Well, you see, T got talk- | ing politics and I forgot all about it | until the polls wer | Silas—Say, Mirandy, have ye no-| ticed how many saloons that feller id ” seat smb . The Sire—You marry my daugh | ter? Impossible! You can't earn | enough to buy her hairpins, oiiiimiansis The Suitor—-In that case I think T aaa i vl c j EN fj could dig up enough to get her a Dutch haircut, “They say the recent influenza epidemic was largely increased by | “You seem to have a good deal of SE aS thnecerene the cireulation of germs on paper | confidence in that fellow.” peter toatl Bob (dismally}—Belle has refused | money.” “What is it now?" “Yes; I believe that I would let | (———————-___ “go? Did you have the ‘flu’?” “Are brunets on the unfair list?”|him take my second best umbrella,” base! DARWINIAN ANCESTR' tb me. Howell—Your wife is a decided} Jack—She must be crazy. | blonde, isn’t she? ‘ " 2 : Ei) Powell—well, at times; put just | B0—¥esi that’s the only consola-| yverything he wants will come to before she ges to the drug store she | ion I have—an Insane wife Would| the man who waits until he doesn’t is @ little undecided, be such a trial, want anything. late without it. “No.” ae eae CRSP LTD i Gerald—I want to tell you about] ‘Ma, how old is that lamp?” Money is called the circulating me-| One of the ever present difficulties | my ancestors. “Four years, son.” dium because it ig difficult to circu-]of a married man is to account for] Geraldine—I don’t want to hear| “Well, turn it out; it’s too young’ his absence from home any monkey talk, to smoke,”

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