The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 7, 1920, Page 11

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THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1920, ADVENTURES OF THE TWINS Olive Roberts Barton THE DOINGS OF THE DU ! MOTHER, WHAT DO You THINK. OF THAT BOW P Who Do You THINK HE LooKs LIKE MOTHER P HELEN OR MEP OW,You DONT WANT To Look LIKE YouR MOTHER ~ You WANT" “) Look. LiKE Your DADDY WHEN You GROW UP- ow, he's ALITTLE DARLING! 1’ PRoUD oF WIM — Oh, TOMMY, He Looks LIKE is BECAVSE HE LOOKS LIKE You | A\\ little abe snd needles il t AN f is Land o' ~ Mh) | peering this way and that. hat are all the things looking|“Funnels!" they éxclaimed In sur-| ?” asked Nancy, as the little pins) prise. | needles and thimbles and things| “Sure! said the soldier, “That's | The Land o' Lost Things kept) what the people here use for chim this way and that wherever|neys, But you've no idea how hard | went. they are to get. People in your land | General Pershing, the tin soldier | don't often Jose a funnel, that's why. | ho was taking the twins to the|Keep ‘em years and years on a hook | Palace in his little car to ask if/in the kitchen, They lose handker- ecko, their lost monkey, was there,/chiefs, and umbrellas, and pocket: | topped the car and turned around. | knives, but did you ever hear of any-| le couldn't run an automobile and] one losing a funnel?” | . too, even if the road was paved | ” said the ce and smooth with lost buttons.| Nancy had an idea. WEDLOCKE. OH, THERE’S PETER IN FRONT OF THE OFFICE Cruel, Heartless Annie. | SAW You | OHPETER, NATCH HIS | TELL HIM MONEY WHO 1 AM +l LOVE PAY o> Alt: SIXTEEN - SEVENTEEN: EIGHT-- NINETEEN - TWENTY -- TWENTY ‘ONE: ITS ALL RIGHT, OFFICER SHE IS MY WIFE OH, ANNIE, PLEASE COME BACK TO ME children, Then} “When we go) “They're looking for chimneys, |back home I'll tell mamma and all) explained. “Better keep your eyes | my aunts to lose their funnels right! nm for one, too.” “Chimney: cried Nick. the ground?” “Down away.” | “And IN remind you! spoke the “Oh, don’t you remember, Nick," | ad Nancy, “we fell down one once the woods? It was Mrs, Wood ‘Chuck's hollow-stump chimney.” | The tin soldier laughed. “These not that kind of chim ‘s. Now look at all the peach-can houses | magical mushroom from Nancy's! pocket | “And we'll take you around,” spoke | the magical green shoes from their feet. The tin soldier started the car| again, for Nancy and Nick were too busy watching all the little lost see here and what do the chim- | things hunting for chimneys to ask |any more questions just then, on top look like?" _ The children looked at once. | (Copyright, 1920, N. E. A) — j | An Enemy Proves a Friend (Copyright, 1920, by T. W. Burgess) aphept THE HARE was in a| sitting down with his head on one} dreadful state of mind. Yes, in-| side, as if studying some way to get | _ deed; he was in a dreadful state of | mind. He crouched under the big pile brush. ‘of brush where Old Man Coyote had driven him and wondered what he|Coyote sat that way, should do next. He didn’t dare leave that pile of brush for fear of Old | head, Jumper out from under that pile of For perhaps two minutes Old Man | then suddenly | pricked up his ears and turned his | Jumper knew that Old Man That's a Bald Question! WHY. A LARGE DLACE WHERE AOTHING WUADDI TELL You 22? Haukae GRANPA ~ IS Your HEAD "Man Coyote, and he didn’t dare re-| Coyote had heard something, Jump- ‘main there for fear of Billy Mink.|er crept a few steps nearer the edge Old Man Coyote couldn't get him/|of the old pile of brush in order to ¢ SPR TRIRNSA Pes ‘there, but Billy Mink could, and he knew that Billy Mink was following this trait by means of that wonderful little nose of his. So Jumper was in despair. He | eeuldn't remember ever having been 4n quite such a bad situation. Not | Knowing what to do, he did nothing | but sit still and shake with fright. | From where he was he could peep} " out. He could see Old Man Coyote, “GHIEF ENGINEER ~BAINS 30 POUNDS IN A SHORT TIME! Not Been Able to Work Five Years; Is Back at Old Job Since Taking Tanlac. ‘*T had not been able to work for years before I started taking ¢, but now I am not only back the job, but have gained thirty inds in weight,” said C. F. Henry, 2560 Fifth ave., West Seattle, Wash., ‘chief engineer of the tugboat “Wal- Jowa. “Five years ago,” continued Mr. | Henry, “I was compelled to give up My job as chief engineer of the tug- _ boat ‘Wallowa,’ as I was almost a ‘complete physical wreck. My stom- _ ach was in terrible condition and I suffered from indigestion the worst @ort. While my appetite was very poor and I ate but very little, even the little I did manage to eat would sour, I would bloat up with gas and have intense cramping pains in the pit of my stomach. My kidneys were ” im bad condition and I suffered with | " such pains in the small of my back it felt like it was breaking in two) fall the time and the muscles seemed _ to draw in knots. The vibration of the boat would cause my back to pain.me so I could hardly stand it I finally just had to quit work. head ached nearly all the time bad I could hardly see and at I would become so dizzy I ould hardly keep from falling. I | ‘Was extremely nervous and this, to- @ether with worry over my condi- tion, kept me from sleeping and I ould lie awake all night long nearly | night and always got up in the forning feeling worse than when 1| nt to bed. I was in such a badly Gn-down conditon I was barely able get around at all and had lost ight until I was scarcely more an a frame, “T had tried so many different | tments and medicines ‘without ting any benefit I had just about fen up hope of ever getting well, tt as I had heard so much about good Tanlac was doing others | d as several of my friends wanted free to take it I decided to give it a lal. Well, sir, I began to get bet- almost as svon as I started tak- it, and as I continued taking t/ 7 continued to improve, until today I| a well man. appetite and eat just anything I want | ithout suffering any bad after ef- ts whatever. My kidneys are in splendid condition and the pains in Smy back are all gone. I never have la headache or become dizzy any ore and can sleep as sound as a log night long every night and al- ays get up feeling rested and full| Ife, Tanlac has surely put me on iy feet again and I am back at my| Job on the ‘Wallowa’ feeling Just | e c& new man and can now do my ‘k with the greatest case.” | ae I have a splendid [ | the brush pile on the other side and |to put as great a distance as possible | between *Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell | Stores under the personal di on of a special Tanlac represen: ’ | Uye—Advertisement, — . see out better. Right away he saw a slim, brown form bounding along to- ward him. It was Billy Mink. Old Man Coyote crouched down with his feet set for a quick spring. Jumper knew then that Old Man Coy- ote had heard Billy Mink coming, It was this that had made him prick up his ears and turn. Billy Mink stop- ped very abruptly, then, like a flash, he turned. He had seen Old Man Coyote, or elve he had smelled him. The in: t Billy Mink turned Old Man Coyote sprang forward. There was no place near for Billy Mink b) seek safety save the brash pile where Jumper was, and Old Man Coyote was between Billy and that brush pile, “Old Man Coyote will get him this time,” thought Jumper, and didn't know whether to be glad or sorry. He wanted with all his might to be rid of Billy Mink. At the same time, he didn’t want anything to happen to Billy. Billy Mink wasted no time looking for a jiding place. Like a flash he climbed the nearest tree, for, you know, Billy is a very good climber. There, just out of reach of Old Man Coyote, Billy crouched on a limb and told Old Man Coyote just what he thought of him. Billy was angry clear thru. It was one thing to hunt and quite another thing to be hunt- Billy crouched on a limb and told Old Man Coyote just what he thought of him. | e4. Old Man Coyote didn’t seem to| mind what Billy Mink said. He sat| down at the foot of the tree quite as| if he intended to stay there. | Jumper waited to see no more.| Very quietly he crept out from under | then he took to his heels. He meant himself and these two jenemies, And as he ran he chuckted “That's the time an enemy proved a| friend,” said he, for he knew that he would have nothing more to fear from Billy Mink that night. Next story: Somethin, Billy Mink Didn't Know. dite: Women Make Peace After Fisticuffs SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 7.—Mre Evelyn G 1 Mrs. da Houston, of Seattle, who staged a fight—hair pulling, biting and everything—last week in the Hotel Fielding here, again are the best of friends. | Judge Owens dismissed of battery against Mrs, Judge Fitzpatrick freed band, vin Gilmer, of embezzlement, Mrs. Houston, for weddin a charg Gilmer her hus- of a charge also preferred by who alleged he used expenses $500 she gave |him to invest for her in an auto. mobile. The three left the hall of justice smiling and chatting, | You never hear ‘one girl pay that another is too young to marry, CONE ON PA, L WANT You To GO SKATING WITH ME, HURRY uP! NOTHIN’ WRONG rn Ww 2) WOW © PURRS LIKE A CAT FULL OPEN IT UP. OF GOLDFISH = Im SO GLAD ‘YOU AND I ARE ALONE PA! TLL TEACH YOU Sone NEW STUNTS! NGINe \ : f ALL RIGHT CLEM, THATS ENOUGH Now GIVE (T-TH’ FOOT: BRAKE AND LET'S SEE HOW SHE WHAT DOES SHE MEAN SHES GONNA TEACH ME SOME NEW STUNTS? “THOSE BRAKE- BANDS Russ F ees Told MANSFIELD, Wash, Feb. 7. Fathers of nine Russian children who refused to salute the American flag in the school appeared late yes- terday in the Waterville court. ‘The salute was against their religious convictions, the prisoners told the | judge. They were sent home with a arning to allow their children honor the flag or to take the cons toland W 81 at Bonney-Watson'’s Saturday 10 a. m BODY KF RAY H. LANG, 30. tern avenue broker, who died in| an Francisco ‘Thursday, will be brought here for interment, Poverty is a sure cure for. dy spep- to Respect Flag, -|'This Wyandotte Hen Works Hard rs of the right hand ‘| OREGON CITY, Feb, 7.—I. p.| Ed Hagen, former policeman, were | maytor, county tax collector, is the | ¢ mashed in a bread mixer in the) o' oo Chatterton Bakery, 1415 Third ave,,|OWner © early Saturday while he was mixing | three |@ batch of bread. Both had to Ve will require most of the hens in Ore: | y amputated at the city hospital.!¢on to work overtime to equal. Mr.| | Hagen is under sentence to serve @| ina vioy \! t MeNeil’s Island prison for sere ak. Be sepa: | brood of 18 chickens last August. | bootlegs He has been working | at the bakery pending an appé ul, | ‘The hen did not wait until her| | rood had been weaned before com: i9 Negro Ex-Yanks |mencing to lay, but on August Lynched in Year| id her first egg. Up to Janu A pe riod of 153 days, she had laid NEW YORK, Feb. 7 Nine negro | 116 f al of the pullets of x-solliers were lynched in the!/ her floc “i i ulready commenced | United States during 1919, accordi laying, with y indieation that! | to a at issued by the National | they will equal the record of the iil | Association for the Advancement of | hen Colored People ‘The old one tips the seales at eight | | een |pounds, and Mr. Taylor is priding | Love doesn't always hold the con-| himself that he is qualified to give | m coin interest in a peerinecta! saat advice to any one decirins | game, to enter the poultry game, |Hagen Loses Two Fingers in Accident| ty Two finge! 6 eit vy purehased the hen with a} — |Seattle Man Heads West Fruit Jobbers| SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 7—A. R. “urrie, of Seattle, was elected presi- a white Wyandotte hen,! dent of the West Fruit Jobbers’ as- rs old, with a record that | sociation yesterday. He is the first »acifi¢ coast man ever to hold this position. Specialists in Sound, Unlisted Securities Our latest offering com bines safety with high yleld—7,62%, ACT NOW. Andrews & Co. 208 Hinckley Bldg. A UTAH PENITENTIARY guard arrived in Seattle Saturday to take jback Thurman Steele, 24, colored, an escaped prisoner picked up here January 26 after he is said to have passed $300 of worthless checks. Yes, George, if you would find out whether the girl loves you, ask her girl beau ARE ‘TOO TIGHT # Ask Psychologist in Spokane Court SPOKA Wi » Feb, 7.—Ap- pointment of a court psychologist is asked by the educational committ of the chamber of commerce here, Cupid teaches the young female mn foe how to shoot, Be Better Looking—Take| » Olive Tablets To gun a clear, p pink skin, 0 iliod ays yu of buoyancy | i your bay ly free from poisonous wastes. Edwards’ Olive Tablets (a table compound mixed with olive ive a act on the liver and bowels like calomel irate have no dangerous sites oe effect. | one ant and jbate a ats That's vinaree boxes ase eold annually, HAVE COLOR IN GHEEKS Why? = bright! you must keep pebtbingrsin: sos BEECHAM’S | a = P

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