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THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1920. OF Were’ Book ~ Guess PLL JUST Go over ANOWT ALL RIGHT - 1 WISH iste a A week Young Maa WE DON?T THE WONDERFUL BALL | WAD-oN MY omer || AND SALARY abernise F AN day Nancy Nick had) N hunted for Jocko, But even with] th their green shoes and the magical! mushroom to help them they had no success Finally they arrived at the hay} field and spent a long time playing in the great stack piled up near the fate. They pretended it was chanted mountain and con and thy had! ¢y, ADVENTURES ne cat ancy, “Can we he em? Mr oughtfully, “Did a scar Mouse stroke DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Ip you hunt for a his whiskers you seo Caesar anywhere he Owl, or Sam Nop we ‘Oh sick if Wilbur Nearly Came Neck TE. ~ Close to Getting It— BRICKLAVER | Y, po ‘Yo UV WANT P \ treasure, t Nick found ® curious round ball] n< And after examining it the children ly watched cold anyway Mig and ISNT YOuR FATHER TH’ DISTINGUISHED LOOKIN’ MAN? WHY HE LOOKS YOUNG Ever SINCE MV FATHER CAME TO LIVE WITH US, I'VE NOTICED ANNIE [~ THINKS MORE OF HIM THAN SHE , BY GOULY, Son. YOU LOOK LiKE You WERE*GUNNIN FoR CHICKENS © THATS A BEAUTS£ ANNIE, WHAT DO YoU THINK HALF TH’*PEP HIS PATHER PETER eee | HAS CT LooK SUsPicious Suddemty Mrs, Mouse shirmeked, “Why, there taey are, your pocket.” sucking out of decided to have a game. The ball) Marie Is subject to croup, and | Was weven of straw and fine twigs) Suddenly she shrieked. “Why,! ’ and made a splendid plaything there they are, sticking out of your| After a while the twins saw Mr.| pocket and Mrs. Harvest Mouse rushing| Nick Jumped. “Where?” he cried about in great excitement, so they! “In that ball, That's our nursery!" stopped their game and Nick thrust) Nick and Nancy took the ball and the ball into his pocket. | listened. Sure enough they heard a! “What is it, Mrs. Mouse?” asked) faint squeaking within Nancy. “Is anything wrong? “We're dreadfully sorry,” they! “Anything wrong! cried Mrs.| apologized, putting their plaything Mouse. “I should say so! While we | down. were away from home, thieves! Mra. broke in and kidnaped our family.! within All the children are gone.” “Oh, that’s \too bad!" | Mouse peeped anxiously! “They're all right,” abe an | swered, graciously, “No harm done.” (Copyright, 1920, N. KA) | declared Thao What Waetd Call ” GEb, MOM SAID - WE COD MAY OVER. AT ALEKS House For ALEK, SYA OVER T’ PLAY Lett PLAY : WITH You, F . TWO HOURT SE Gor wit NY “LECTRIC BE DOIN’ IFT LOTS OF ToS FoR. Teale talibN CURISTMAS, Too. We ‘A : | » The Danger Signal . BY THORNTON W. BURGESS (Copyright, 1920, by T. games was & great deal of uneast- ness in the big barn where the | Robber Rats lived. Would Billy! Mink return, or had he just made a chance visit and gone somewhere | | else? The gray old leader of the rate |» felt sure that Billy would Yeturn. He was too anxious to eat, and, you | know, when a rat's appetite fails he | must be very much disturbed, indeed. | But the younger rats thought the | gray old leader needicssly frightened, and they went about their business | Of stealing food and gnawing holes Wherever there seemed a chance of | D finding a new food supply, Just as if} Rothing had happened. However, | [tach hole which led into the barn| Was continually watched by sharp | eyes. Those rats did not intend to} _ be taken by,surprise a second time. | | _ Rats prefer the hours of darkness. | ‘They hate the light of day. Perhaps | | that is becnuse their deeds are deeds | S» Of darkness. So, when daylight eame, | most Of the rats returned to their! “He'll probably sleep all day,” | beds to sleep. Only underneath the | thought the gray old leader. * | barn, where it was dark, did any of | them continue to run about, seeking | fut Billy is very eure of hig ability what mischief they might get into. | to take care of himself. He first But the wige, gray old leader saw |™Ade sure that no one was about to it that a witch was kept on each | Then he slipped-out from under that D hole just the ‘same as during the | Pile of wood, and a minute later he night. He didn’t think Billy Mink |W8* under the barn. Then it was / would come in the daytime, but he| that the danger signal was sounded E was wise enough to know that Billy |>¥ the rat who was watching the Mink is forever doing the wnexpect-| bole thru which Billy entered. It 4. He suspected that Billy would |¥®* at once passed on from rat to} fake great paing not to let the farmer | Tat until every one in the barn knew | whe owned that barn know that he | that their enemy had returned, Was anywhere about. “He'll prob- 3 ve ably sleep all day,” thought the pct, Next story: Why the Plans of the Old leader, “but just as soon ax it| Rate Failed. beat; o get dark he'll be back bh 5 “gine ee “Lie CA Tjust feel it in my bones.” | Frank A. Munsey Buys N. Y. Herald But it wasn't dark when there sud éenty sounded the danger signal from | One of the watchers. In fact, it was | NEW YORK, Jan. 15--Frhink A broad daylight, the very middie of|Munsey has bought the New York! the day. You see, daylight and dark-| Herald, the New York Evening Tel fess are all one to Billy Mink. Helesram and the Paris Herald. An-| sleeps whenever he feels sleepy, re-|nouncement appeared in the Herald| gardiess of whether it be night or|today that sale of these news day, At all other times he is very | properties of the late James Gordon | E bwide awake, indeed. It happened that | Bennett had been consummated last Billy had awakened just about noon! night SAN, FRECKLES 2 W. Burgess) that day, and, as is usual with him after a nap, he was hungry. If he had been @ rat instead of a mink, he might have remained under the woodpile until darkness came. Too Much Palm Beach \F T HEAR TH THAT REMINDS WORDS * PALM me' I NEEDA BEACH” AGAIN Im LIADLE To FoRGET IMA GENTLEMAN! Trt GOIN’ OUT | AN’ COOL OFF: CHANCE OF \NG TO PALM IT MUST BE PRETTY NICE 4T Patt BEACH @BOUT Now- How'D YOu LIKE To DBE THERE? | CLEO UGED To WORK “THE: —By AHERN COME TO THINK OF IT, OL EGYPT WAS CLEOPATRA Home aed t VAMPG GROUNDS, AN ACCORDING ‘To TM’ DOPE SHE PARTS ABOUT 2000 NEAR ~~ ow- 00 WAS SOME HUMMER FOR LOOKS © < fal! WT ALL THAT TIME SINCE? / any — — NTO WER ORBS, Ail’ THEN You WAS aT ger8 oe ONE LOOK 1 Cs) si | fo PRACTICE, TH’ EGNPTIAN \l wee Comes i TOURE Mone GALS NOW OUGHT "TD MAKE )\ one Now SS mar av' ric nant A icy bya are = SEVP / NOTHING Au? —" 43. Fear ea y Sickness Cure or Sickness Prevention . dew Pea When Pasteur proved the relation of germs to in- fectious disease, he marked a big advance in that development of medical science which reigns to- day—the Idea of Sickness Prevention. As a result, many plagues and epidemics that were the bane of former ages no longer terrify the world, and science has now developed an effective agent against the condition which 1s the first cause of over 90% of all human disease~constipation. That effective agent is Nujol. Nujol by relieving constipation prevents the absorbtion ey -—_* is A { . erton, fell from his tin the d- (Dies on Crowded —_|si'en,"itiomre'nnced i bas | Home-Bound Car}! his seat. A physician was ob- living at 9086) was pronounced death had probably dead on a Seattle} been due to heart disease. Hanson |& Rainier Vall day, en route to his home, SUGAR GOING UP A new retail price mit of 18% cents a pound for cano sugar was indicated today by the fair price committee following a conference | | Peter Valdez st., Manson, 6 street car Wednes-| leaves a wife. ‘of poisons which otherwise would be taken into the blood Additions to the board of direct- j : and so under-mine the whole system. Plo } an Ti _| Hanson, who was a cabinet maker! A man's second love is apt to be| with wholesalers Wednesday. The} | rs in the Guardian Trust & Sav | Leading medical authorities agree that pills, salts, castor li as bank and the Dexter Horton | V™Ployed in the navy yard at Brem-! worth more money than his first. Pounar’ price limit is 18 cents a i J Nn ings © Dexter Hort chains loon ay Senate ctchahaceratindicaoens tino. Ha SEO oil, etc., simaply fpres and weaken the eyviem, |iational bank were announced at | pee-oeseoeecoee Increase in the wholesale price of | f ak Cw : But Nujol is entirely different. the annual elections of the two in- | 6% cents a pound was allowed by | ff bi he an y Nujol prevents constipation by softening the food waste stitutions this week. J.T. Heffer the committee, it was announced. | ¢ and encouraging the int ies to act naturally. nan and Frank M. Sullivan were ° The raise will bring the product up ! 5 & ; * o the board of the Dexter to 16.53,cents a pound wholesale, This | | : 4 Nujol helps nature establish easy, thorough bowel evac- d to thy S i : e ' at at mane intervals — the healthiest habit in the en ” basil i ie Horch ti ” Sates tei uate keen, approx!-| 1 Firs¢ dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound”’ relieves all world. Get a bottle from your druggist today. , wa@ elected assistant credit mana rae ' : : 4 | ge No other changes were made | At @ further meeting Thursday the | || =—* i H For valuable health booklea—' Tidey Fost at (New ifn ae sseoaatiel of the bank si committee was to Getarniinsy woe stuffiness and distress—No quinine! Costs little! Ae, ARENA LIHAT lotto K. Strizek, formerly vice | “ cifically thé retail price of the new] = = Jersey), 50 Broadway, N.Y. crop. In view of the fact that an rdian Trust & Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blow-|stops nose running; relieves heads he, dullness, feverishness, sneegs 7 soreness, stiffness, pe ‘Pape's Cold Compound” is the quickest, surest relief known and costs only a few cents at drug stores. 1 ts without assistance, Tastes ni Contains no. quinine, Insist on. Pape's! president of the Nujol ts sold only tn sealed bemles bearing the Nujol Trade | Meech es thowen here, bewware af product raprevnted 0 be Tee may maffor from wabstiveres, extra profit of 35 cents a hundred. weight was allowed the wholesalers, it is expected a slight additional mar- ginal profit will be permitted the re- tailers. Savings bank, w veted to the | |presidency of the bank, succeeding | | Robert Wilson, who ‘vas made s) | vice president at the annual elec- ‘tion Wednesday. 8. G. Spring, L. | M. Stern and Stephen A. Hull were lL, , added to the board of director Warning: “the wame a Nujol”, Nujol for Constipation ing and snuffling! A dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” taken ev- ery two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks up a cold and ends all grippe misery, The first dose opens clogged-up |nostrils and air passages of head; They Thoroughly Cleanse Liver and Bowels Without Griping or Shaking You Up—Ideal Physic! setae eee ttt ttre tt eaten e usness, head-}ening Ol or cramping Pills, ‘To. netipation #o| night take Cascarets and get rid of water boils in a ketile ine gently you're never incon }the bowel and liver poison which is in Japan the bubbles hit | venienced. There is no griping and/keeping s you miserable and sick. bars and produce musical|none of the explosive after-effects of |Cascarets cost little and work while catharticy Uke Calomel, Salts, sick-jyou sleep Ponte ar Cod! seectenee end and When a man tn Denmark is found so drunk as to require medical at |tention, the doctor's bill must be paid by the proprietor 6f the tavern where the inebriate obtained his last |arink, . | Cascarets ache, colds, Ww || STAR WANT ADS BRING