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THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1920. ADVENTURES oF on tt Twi NS ‘oberts Barton WHY ARE You THE LOST SHOES || |[Looxs 30 | Dows HEARTED? DOINGS OF THE DUFFS You Poor Fign, I'm Married! Talks » Very Big—_ Went, JACK, 1 simpey wouon’tT Do rr! AMAL HAS Wis Busiess AFFAIRS TO Look AFTER AND HE SiouOK'T] BE BOTHERED WITH Domestic TuinGs-‘You ovGur “To AsseaT Wurserr AND Tom SAN, THE VERY MinUTE | GET 14 THAT HOUSE ThE WIFE WAS » GOT SOMETING FOR. Ma To Do: I's JACK DO THIS, JACK DO THAT, JACK Come. HERE ~ Jack GO bap nage tO 4 f| | SAX. Let's Go over. 4 AUD PLAY A GAME oF Poon ! WELL, 1 SUPPOSE Heir, Jack! ‘| Doutr THe by) Home. LiFe G| Acree wrk You, Jack P 4 ry CANT Do tr JAcK« (ve Got % Take MY wire’s CoRseT BACK AND: EXCHANGE IT BEFORE When Nick and Nancy found they} it was spinning fast, with so many Were caught In the spider's web | lees to turn the wheel and so many they didn't know what to do at| “fms to hold the thread | w cam first. You seo they had lost theirlovers © "°°" — wf p Hoasical green shoes that coukt make! “Good morning,” it eaid, very | them any site, so they couldn't wish | pleasantly, “I didn't know 1 had vie | Whemselves Dig again. And they itors, That's very nice, I'm sure. | eoulin't go to look for them because | In just have you stay to dinner.” hey could scarcely move. When-| The twins wondered whose dinner | Some Resolutions ARE Foolish. They saw a great big spider sitting at a tidy spinning wheel. ever they did they seemed to get} the spider meant, its dinner or theirs, | tangled up more than ever, | but they tried to look Interested, | “Oh, we'll never get out of here to) “Thank you" they said, politely, | unt for Jocko, our poor lost mon-| “If you'll excuse me, I think rm) key! sighed Nancy bebe over to the ant hole and get a “Cheer up,” said the magical mush- | nice, fresh ant,” said the spider, “The | Foom in her pocket hard, they might “Just be brave | mi have patience. That gets most | wople out of trouble.” And its advice came just in time, if the children hadn't tried pretty | ve felt really | For all at once they| & spinning noise, and, turning | frightened 4 “ground, they saw a great, big spider, Breen one, mind you, sitting at a spinning-wheel. And, my, but rooster hag been there, but he's prob ably left some.” “Will you please look for two pair of green shoes?" asked Nancy lost some. “Certainly™ said the spider, oblic ingly. “I'm glad you spoke of it.” And away it went, Nick and Naney were sure they coukl get away now, Capyright, 1920, N. B.A) Jerry's Suspicion Dies Hard BY THORNTON W. BURGESS (Copyright, 1920, by T. W. Burgess) Suspicion’s a persistent thing: It will not die, but cling and cling. [) faith and trust have been driven out by suspicion, it is wice as hard to restore them as it Was to establish them in the first That is why any one who its in the mind of another suspi- ‘tion of some one eclee, does the very | Worst kind of an injury if it happens a, tts, "p loneee swam about freely Farmer Brown's Boy was Siipes, a0 bo csad to. that there are no grounds for suspl clon. Just take the case of Jerry Muskrat and Farmer Brown's Boy. Thru kind and thoughtful deeds, for a long time Farmer Brown's Boy had established faith and trust in the Minds of Jerry Muskrat and all the x 2a COLDS The fair fame of “Seventy-seven” for Grip and Colds is the entering wedge ilies for Dr. Humphreys’ sional to treat A simple Medical Book published in English, French, Spanish, Portu guese and German—mailied free to any address in the world, At all Drug and Country Stores. Hamphreys’ Homes. Medieine Co. 156 William Atrest, New York / What does _ mirror volleot’ 9 | Imperfections of the skin, such as roughness, blotches, pimples ‘and ted spots? If s0, begin the use of Resinol Soap; and see if its whole- some, cleansing qualities do not make a marked improvement in a surprisingly short time. Don’t wait try it today! papier aA O Ia into matiy homes and fam-| long lst | ot Remedies for all diseases which it! iw safe and wise for the non-profes-| ur, AN Ti {i " (i . GEE “Nou DONT know AANTUING ABOUT NUNRERS =~ | 7 TH PLAYIN’ OR TH PlAck- J Row ANYWAY ! Mee Jother little people of the Green For- jest, the Green Meadows, and all the Smiling Pool. They had learned to regard him as a true friend. Then along had come a xtranger, who also pretended to be a friend. Day after day he brought dainties for Jerry Muskrat, until Jerry regarded him just as he did Parmer Brown's Boy, and wasn't the least bit suspicious. Then the stranger had set traps and Jerry had been caught by the | tall in one of them. It was just good | |fortune that he had been able to| get away, but all Jerry's faith and trust in two-legged creatures called men had been destroyed. He was suspicious of every one of them, in cluding Farmer Brown's Boy. To be gure, the latter had taken away the stranger's traps and had left a notice warning the stranger to stop trap ping along the Laughing Brook and) around the Smiling Pool, But Jerry couldn't read that notice. All he knew was that the stranger had been | Rood to him. just as Farmer Brown's | Boy had, and then had set a trap) | for him. How could he be sure tha | Farmer Brown's Boy wouldn't do the same thing? So, the Farmer Brown's Boy came |to the Smiling Poot every day and | did everything he could think of to show Jerry that he was a true friend, Jerry continued to be suspicious. He no longer swam about freely when Farmer Brown's Boy was there, as he used to do, Instead, he remained hidden until Farmer Brown's Boy | went away Always the latter left good things for Jerry to eat, things Jerry was | | fond of—pieces of sweet apple, car. | rot, parsnips and pumpkin. But for a long time Jerry would not touch them. When at last he did venture to eat them, it was only after a very careful search for hidden traps. The queer thing is that all the time Jerry wanted to trust Farmer Brown's Boy, just as he had in tho past. But the memory of his sore| tail and his dreadful fright kept sus- picion alive. It simply wouldn't die. | Farmer Brown's Boy knew it was #0) and understood why. It made him| | sad, and also it filled him with anger | towards the trapper who had de stroyed the old faith and trust. Next story: Jerry Meets With an it. KEEPING Looki OVER OTTO AUTO Nowir fon & KERDETONE "Everything That || Glitters Not Gold | {2 | 8. C. Calderhead, secretary of the | Northern Savings & Loan annocta | tion, declared on the stand in | Superior Judge Clay Allen's court! Friday morning that altho the asso. | elation is capitalized at $12,000,000 he owns but $2 in stock. Cc. C. Will has a judgment of $165.20 against Calderhead, He claima Calderhead will not pay and) brought supplementary proceedings | *— to force him to do so, Upon examin-| ation by Attorney L. B. Schwellen. | bach he said that he only owned $ j stock in the association. Sorenson; “N The number of sheep in Scotland Ww Yo Gi réuniias is not only two-thirds of a million be-|¢o, Mrs. Carl Sorenson, wife of a low the average, but the lowest in| sugar planter of the Virgin islands pbs hoi |to take up the cudgel in defense of | cigar smoking by women, when she) larrived here on the steamer United| | States of the Scandinavian-American line yesterday. Mrs, Sorenson smoked big Havana cigars thruout the voyage from Copenhagen, passengers said, much | to the indignation of some women aboard “Other women smoke cigarettes,” she said, “but I don't like them. 1 prefer cigars and if I want to emoke them it's nobody's business but my own.” Mrs. Sorenson's husband and two! children, «who accompanied her, agreed. Captain Abernathy and six officers | of the steamer Kerwood, which! struck « mine and sank in the North sea, December 1, were the Inst of | the crew of that vessel to reach the K, Jan. 3 | Pneumonia often follows a | Neglected Cold | KILL THE COLD! HIL’S nares QUININ old remedy for 20 years patton form—safe, aT no “I Prefer Cigars,” Says Mrs. Tada Knew ALL RIGHT. SVE Tuar RUMRER? WELL, BOW TI Siow YA How To AULTIPLY BY TRA JUST W RUBBIN' OUT TH’ UP WITH THE JONSES € GUESS THAT'S TH Guy I'n ARE You A FIRENAN ? N’ For, THERE! + fal INDIA COBRA «THEY GAY THESE Lats Can GAP OT pal! ‘Phe You A MUTE AMEAD OF TMG, THEY'RE THaT PAST: All Right! TLL JUST Stow You It t CANT NOW, WHERE iS ‘TH’ } OUR JANITOR HOW || TO GET Some HEAT [outa TH’ FURNACE! 99 lobody’s Business 5 : United States. Had the aceldent oc curred 24 hours later all hands prob: ably would have been lost, Abernathy said, as a great storm arose shortly after he and his men were rescued. Hans Seedorf, Danish poet, with hia bride, also was aboard the United’ States. The 27-year-old writer said he was taking a trip around the world on $10,000 raised from ad vances on a book of poems he intends to write on his experiences. One hundred of his admirers put|!" up $100 each for copies of the un written book, Seedorf me Coughing ttn aiing end gt oes PISO'S JURY IN TRIAL OF DRY INSPECTOR DISMISSED Manassas, Va., Jan, &—The jury jin the trial of William C. Hall, pro- | hibition inspector, charged with the murder of Lawrence Hudson and R. C. Shackleford, reported a dis- agreement and was excused yester- day. It was understood that the jury stood nine for conviction and: three Tr It Seems Sometimes ns if You Would Wily Out of Your Skin ma_or salt but it also burns, ooze foalen over and ‘over Sometimes it covers the whole and causes intense suffering. You have found that local applica- tions have no lasting effect, and you want permanent relief. ‘Take Hood's Sarsaparilla, give it a good fair trial, because you must rheum not only sab | ere will continue to annoy, per- haps agonize y This great medi- cine han been suceessfully used in thousands of cases, To make and keep the bowels normally active take Hood's Pills, they are gentle and thorough, ;| BOMBS? PROSECUTOR thoroughly purify your blood or the | Old Hi Cost Due for Swat; Smelt __ a PORTLAND, Ore., Jan, 3.--Old Hi} And the smelt will be still cheaper, Cost is due to receive a healthy | for hundreds of persons will soon be wallop in the jaw. Wor Ge amnelt have entered the|{** to go fo ‘the streams of thia Cowlitz river. The advance gtiard|'ocality—with dip nets, dishpans, in the Cowlitz presages the annual|wash boilers and the like—and dip run of smelt in the streams of this|free smelt out of the water. vicinity, whieh will goon be alive! oe "thie "eh Midshipman Dies This “cheapest and best” fish has j already reached the Portland market, ; of Pistol Wound| WASHINGTON, Jan. 38.—Midship- man Carroll Joy, of Keokuk, Towa, died Thursday at Annapolis, as a result of a pistol wound accidentally inflicted by Midshipman M, C. Comp- ton while the students were engaged in target practice in the woods near the naval academy, Secretary Dan- pr jels has announced. sy i Joy was struck in the head and m boxes are not going to be)" atte Until-atter the Dansey case | Never Tegained consciousness, ia over,” said Gaskill, “I have heard of prosecutors being put out of the; Alaske has pald for herself 120 way by mysterious packages before.” times over, WON’T OPEN BOXES ATLANTIC CITY, N, J., Jan. 3.-— Sitting in the hall of Prosecutor Gas- kill’s home on Atlantic ave. are three “Christmas” boxes received by ex- FAE WOWOND —By AHERN “Hee He's Fur oF music dow ba} "Start Annual Run Up the Cowlitz | | | An! (1% GOT HI Gonl! Wi CIRCLES: HE THINKS HED A DON'T WHIP! Stop Lashing Your Bowels with Harsh Cathartics but take ‘‘Cascarets.”” Everyone must occasionally gi the bowels some regular help or suffer. from constipation, bilious at tacks, stomach disorders, and | headache, But do not whip the els into activity with harsh cal es, + What the liver and bowels need ts a gentle and natural tonic, one can constantly be used without liver and bowel tonic They put the liver work and cleanse the colon and els of all waste, toxins and poi without griping-they never or ineonvenier you like C Salts, Oit, or Purgatives. Twenty-five million boxes of C carets are sold each year, work while you sleep, © cost so little, too