The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 25, 1919, Page 11

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)

ERETT TRUE MINS, 1% WISH You’D IT MPARKINSON ON. —By CONDO} De You wish To SPEAK To Him? 1X WANT To TICKS HIM WOER THS CHIN Even Reddy Fox Hates Terror BY THORNTON W. BURGESS (Copyright, 1919, by T. W. Burgess) ‘OU'LL seldom find love where | nevertheless hated him, and one of | fear is, Instead, you'll almost | these was Reddy Fox. Reddy hated always find hate. That was the case | him because he interfered with Red fm the Green Forest when Terror the y's hunting. You eee, Terror likes Geshawk came down from the Far | the very same things Reddy does. th. There was not one of the) Up to the time of Terror’s arrival "Mite people in feathers and tur|from the Far North, Reddy had had gmaller than Reddy Fox who did not fairly good hunting. That is to say fear Terror, and one and all hated|he had managed to get enough to | . THE SEATTLE DOINGS OF THE DUFFS NOW LISTEN DANY AnD AUsCT DoouTiey f wu Te. ‘oy A STORY. ONCE UPON A “Time. THERE LIVED A LITTLE BOY WHO LOVED “T RUM AWAY FROM home — So ONG DARK AND RAWY AIGHT HE GOT UP WHILE HIS PARENTS WERE. EP AND STARTED DOWN The. ROAD - HE WALICED AND WALKED ‘AND AND DooR SLA! rsevr- ‘The Tne : LISTENED - HE WAS Su00eN! ITAR—THURSDAY, SEPT. 2! Tom Got a Thrill FINALLY We CAmet TO A RICKETY OLD Brick House VAERE HOBO HAD LIVED FOR MAM Nears - WE WENT UP AND ThieED THe Doo TT WAS OPEN- He wen'r Id ~ THE wm Anup LocKED BEN STUD AND FRIGHTENED ~ MED BEWND -—By ALLMA THE HANDS Sook hin AND Spook him AGanl- Then WE HEARD WS MOTHERS VACE. TELLING Wimi, To GET UP “THAT (T WAS TIME FOR oon as Well as Danny. HE RAW TO "TWE DOOR BUT “Were WAS No KeN To OEM Ir- he WAS Locked IN— “THEM CAME ANSINER, SOUND- LOUDER THAN “THe FIRST AND YET (T Was HARD TO TELL WHERE IT Came FRom - SUDDENLY) We FELT A Hanp-Ir TovcweD Him! ANOTHER WAND AND THAT TToucneD Him! WEDLOCKED— GEE -'M HAPPY - } KNOW Just HOw JOHN D. FELT AFTER HE MADE His FIRST mition - { WEW WAN THAT OLD SJ ChOCR RUNNIN’ VET TAG @ WIT I RUN WT Th Bay SToRe wn THs DENOULUM | him as they hated few others, Even Jimmy Skunk feared Terror, for he | ~ knew that {f Terror should find him Ro other food was to be found, eat, tho he seldom had a full stom: ach For several days he had not bee: over to the Green Forest, | done all his hunting in the But it was not only those wholture and on the Green Meadows feared Terror who hated him. There | 7, | | en one morning he did go over ‘Were others too big to fear him who | t, the Green Forest, and as he trot ted along he felt sure that he would “BEATS NYTHING be able to get a good breakfast | “I haven't hunted here for several : nd I'VE EVER SEEN,” es 9 days,” thought Reddy, Can Do Almost Two Days! Whitefoot the Woodmouse and Stru ter the Grouse and his family hav Work in One Since Taking Tanlac had nothing to worry them and are likely to be a little bit careless, I “I don’t remember a time in my | ean think of nothing that would taste better than a plump grouse.” life when I felt better than I do since taking Tanlac,” said Carl Rot heaitate to kill him. as no one knows better how to do than Reddy Fox. But tho he hunt- ed and hunted with all the clever ness and skill which he possesses: he found not so much as @ trace of any one who would furnish him with |a breakfast. The Green Forest | seemed to be deserted. It was as if No one at all was living there “This is queer,” thought Reddy, as “I haven't been what you would| he sat down to rest ro a few yin | eafl a well man for over ten years,” | utes. “I don't understand it at all | eontinued Mr. Mihailovits, “and for|1 haven't even heard Sammy Jay the past year my health has been | this morning, and that is very un exceptionally bad. For many years usual.” | have been badly constipated, and| As he sat there wondering what | to take a laxative of some kind|{t could mean, a big bird shot past every day, and often I would have|him and lighted on a dead tree not) violent spells of headache. Finally | | hb began to giv> me trou- had graduaiy grown| , I reached the point| “s% hing I ate disagreed | Gas would form on my| stomach and rise up into my chest) a cause my heart to palpitate| g awful. Sometimes these | ' spells would come on me after go- ‘ing to bed at night, and I would not sleep a wink, and would get up) fn the morning so weak and tired out that I could hardly get about. It just seemed impossible for me to find a medicine or treatment | that would do me any good, and I) Just kept on going down hill until! I was almost past traveling. “Well, Tanlac came along then, | and as so many people were in-| dorsing it so strong I thought there | must be something to it, so I bought = bottie of it and com. |"? *t down to rest. menced taking it, and the way it|far away. One glance wan enough has overcome my troubles and built|for Reddy to recognize Terror the Me up beats anything I have ever|Goshawk. He drew his lips back in “seen or heard of. Why, I sleep|an ugly snarl and glared up at Ter: ‘like a log ten hours every night,/ror. If hate could kill, Terror would when morning comes I jump|have dropped dead that very instant. of bed and eat a hearty break-| You see, Reddy understood at once “fast and am off to my work feeling | why there was no sign of those he fine and dandy. I feel #0 well and| sought. He knew they were in hid strong that I can almost do two|ing. He knew that fear reigned in| days’ work in one, What I eat/the Green Forest because of Terror agrees with me perfectly now, and |the Goshawk, and that there was no I never have a sign of stomach|chance for a breakfast there that trouble of any kind. The head-| morning. aches are gone, tgo, and my entire| system has been wonderfully built | So, with pleasant thoughts of a good | breakfast, Reddy entered the Green | its, a well known poul: who lives at 183 Lebee Forest and at once began to hunt} San Francisco, a few days (3 * “This is queer,” thonght Reddy, as Next story; Reddy Fox Quarrels Foolishly. long as I live I will praise this} wonderful medicine for relieving) me of years of suffering and gtv-| ing me good health again.” Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell Drug Stores under the personal di-| rection of a special Tanlac represen- tative.—Advertisement. | BLISSHEe: HERB 1 first aid to thousands of peo- TABLETS phe for the relief of KIDNEY TROUBLE The Romances Summer Girl By Zoe Beckley Copyright, 1919, by N. B.A Silversand Lake My last day at Silversand, Joan dear, and ono to be marked with a white stone of remembrance I had been feeling blue as I packed my things. For after all,| ja business job was not the object lof this summer outing. Randy Lewia’ letter, which came this| |morning, added to my feeling of failure, He {8 #0 positive the post tion Mr. Herron offers me is not a wise one to take, and I do have confidence in Randy's judgment There is no one I'd rather have |think well of me than Randy. But it is too late. I have made up my jal for arr! and Indigestion is Kidney and Liver Regulator Guaranteed to «iv a or mney refunded. ablet mark ntaine in trade Put up in nis ¥ by Alonso O. Bliss | commonplace jmy NA MGInis, 1M THE BUNKUM ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINE CO. WE HAVE NOT RECEIVED YOUR CHECK 83 yet! iT 1S TH’ FELLER. WHO SOLD fty! WIFE THAT | NACHINEP ; OTTO AUTO tTS ALL OV 9 HOw HAVE HIM RUN OP A DE DITCH AND COME To A FOOT “RIDGE JUST HGH ENOUGH FOR ONIN “THE AUTO TD GO UNDER- | OTTO WILE THEN GE STUM! PED TO STOP Fos LL _ WHROOP- Low BRIDGE AMERD-) PULL wt TH’ EARS AN Wind UP TH’ NECK YES, I TRUST SATIS FACTORY! The Joys of Mak OH, PETER, | DON*T KNOW WHAT WERE GOIN’ “‘T’ DO= 1 SPEND FIVE DOLLARS MORE THAN Nou MAKE EVERY! GBE = WHEN T GET {T AX FIXBD So SHE Exit One WELL (T ISN'T: SHE'S HAD A TERRIBLE TIME WITH THAT ELECT RUC MACHINE! WELL 1 Swa' AUTO FELLERS Be dow, DITCH AN'GOES RIGHT GOL WHOOPI ing People Happy. WASN/T | TH’ Simp 1” TELL HER | Gor MORE THAN & FIVE DOLLAR RAISE 7 WELL, DONT LET THAT BOTHER YOu ANY MORE,— | Gor A TEN DOLLAR. A WEEK RAISE TODAY COMES UP UNDER ‘TH BRIDGE - w’ BULLFROGS f <= By POP MOMAND SHE WAS SHOCKED 10 DEATH @T THE Way THE CLOTHES LOOKED WHEN THEY pd Cane out! > Y Salesman. AH Sie! Do NOT TELL NE SHE RECEIVED @ SHocK! THATS JUST WHAT SHE GoTt~- BDAY sia! re aaa oth DINGLES | Herron |me." He faltered and I held my After lunch I went to say good|breath for him to go on, Yet some. bye to the beautiful lake, and met|thing, Joan, kept telling me no—no Eric Wallis in the summerhouse. |—no—it isn't what you seek. “Dorothy, I don't want you to] “Dorothy—" he took up the go,” he said, And once more the!thread again, tho it seemed to me tenderness in his voice thrilled me|ne was thinking aloud rather than as it had that first day at Lively! saying something definite to me, “I Beach whe he performed the| want—we've got to decide just what service of carrying| we mean—to each other, It's strange, dear, I can think for others, analyze do? I\for others, but not for myself.” must have been both | “Well, I can, Eric,” I said softly wistfulness and tiredness in my! light seemed to be breaking tone for he moved close to me on|my mind. “I know what I mean the rustic bench and lald his hand|tg you is the feeling of the over mine. | wande the fireside. There “What you WANT to do,” helare times when it is the most answered. “Is {t making you hap-|grateful thing in the world to him, py, this work you are undertaking|as it was to you—after the war. for Herron?” |Hut it would be prison to have to “No, But what's the use?”|live beside it always.” I shrugged. “It’s a good Job. Many| He tried to interrupt, a girl will envy me. The summer | hushed him ia nearly gone, and I've got to think “Let me go on You of the future There's a time for|wandeter by temperament dreaming and idling and a time for|necessarily places, but people, situa working,” [ tried to laugh tions, moods, I am the firestde. “ve been trying to work,” eaid|1 want the simple, permanent things “ric, “and T found myself dreaming,|—love, home, family, garden, neigh Dolly. I've been thinking about! bors, friends, things to tle to, with bags. “What think there would have me Oh, but I the not are in| the| Jand then, to give my home more attraction. “So for you and me, Eric, the oc-| casional meeting and the constant! friendship. Haven't I put it the way |your heart puts it, if you will really |listen to the truth?” | He said nothing—just stared off] across the Inke, still grasping my |hand. His grasp tightened and he| lsuddenly brought his eyes back to} jmy face, | | “There were times when I thought when I was sure, Dorothy, that you and I "Yes, dear, so did 1," I did not} Jwant him to finish. “But l've| turned it over very carefully and) I feel it's best—this way. Don't you?" He stood up, went behind me and put both hands gently on my shoul-| | ders. | “A girl who sees so steadily what | |she wants you, Dorothy, will surely get {t--and doubly surely deserve it," he said softly, “I wish I wero-—different “Don't wish It," I said, rising | quickly and assuming a gay smile. “It is Just right this way.” as mind and ‘I bave promised Mr.jyou @ tremendous lot, You anda season of wandeging only now We spent the last evening to yaipay gether by the fire in the hotel|and the case was din su-/ lounge. In an hour I shall wave |perior court Wedn re tak- good-bye to him from the rear plat-|ing the oath, Bailey removed his) form of Mr. Herron's ci I shall|/shoes and socks, put on a turban, | be whirled away-—-whe jand then, with both hands on the/ DOLL Koran, swore his oath to Allah, THINE, Oath on Koran Is Enough for Hindu When George Bailoy, America \ized Hindu, swore by the Koran (sat he did not owe Abdul Gofoor a $26 grocery bill, Gofoor took his word, CARPENTERS WANTED Steady work for good men, $7.50 for eight hours, For Rent n unit house on 4 round est Seattle. Tam ering how many people in Seal would be anxious to rent thia pl I would bet there are several hi dred, And it might pa: them for rent. But w you can buy for and 315 per month the owner of this home. This 2 « ALFAROS’ ay ent OYSTER HOUSE Lied 1512 Sth Ave., Beween Pike and Pine Near Coliseum Theatre You can save 50c per day ating here, OYSTE! i make 3 T build, Hit at your teisur also furnished free. owner, not ar fenlar ‘will solv robe i lem—or see me, ‘H. C. Peters, 716 8rd Ave, When you think of advertis- ing, think of The Star, RS IN CITY your home p oe 50¢ 40¢ B5¢ Master Builders’ Assn. 4082 Arcade Bldg. Halt Dor, on Halt Shell. SEATTLE Special ention to After Theatre Parties

Other pages from this issue: