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| Drug Stores under the personal ai-| feet were wet ADVENTURES OF cles Webenks Berta When the Fairy Queen heard the disgraceful way in which Jack Frost was behaving, she twas ever so put out about tt Nafey and Nick and the Ma, Mushroom got to the Fairy Que in @ great hurry, afte oe Jack Frost pinchin | fairies in the Land Wheres We-Coming, for the Green al [Jack Prost, and he tenows it.” ‘ Then the Mushroom (whe had ai idea, you remember) thought tt was | time to aay something Jack Froat f | is afraid of Mr, Sun,” he dectared. | Why can't he chase him for ust’ Bo faster than your Mlectrio engine| «The very thing! exclaimed the ‘@n its shiny tin crack }Pairy Queen, Then suddeniy her When'’the Fairy Queen heard the | face clouded, “But where I8 Mr Gingrhcetul way in which Jack Frost | Sun? sho asked, “I haven't pe was behaving she was ever s put) him for a week and four days and ent about it. “My, oh my! she ex. | three hours and eleven minutes and | claimed #0 emphationily that herj twenty seconds, I need him very ‘efown slid sideways, and she had to| much, too, for other things I'm Btraightén it. “Here I've been so | completely out of yellow paint, and || Dusy getting the ogee colored for the can't make any more until Mr. sun Easter Bunny, and getting him/ gives me some golten beams to) started Gn his travels, I haven't had make it with.” Pime to notice what Was going on.) At that, the twins held up thelr) Jack Frost is up to his impish | empty buckets. Why, that's what) he, holding hack the spring our errand ts about,” they explained. | the fairies who are try: |“Rubadub sent us for same yellow | to put the buds on! Now just) paint so he can paint the soning | te think a minute! And for a | flowers.” shé tapped her wand thought: | I shall tel you tomorrow what Mr . Presently she said. “I'm a/ Sun did when he was found ‘fairy, but I haven't any power aver (Copyright, 1920, N. B.A.) des | hf 2b es * Bobby Coon Gets a Wetting EPOBEY COON wae Strolling along, half theif time in the water and of the Laughing cateh fish by swimming faster than trying to decide the fish can. Bobby haa a long coat) © fishing or not. He | and he isn't any too fond of getting ly loves to fish, does Bobby |it wet, Ho catches fish from the and he sometimes goes fish-|shote. There ian't anything much | he Gught to be attending quicker than Bobby's little black paw | hings. Now, while Bobby | when Je sets a fish within reach | But if Bobby Coon doesn’t like te | #0 in swimihing hé does like to play jim and around the water, and so} this bright, beautiful morning as he came down the Laughing Brook he stopped at every little pool to play. By and by bie sharp eyes spotted something bright and shiny on the bottom of the tiny pool | Now Bobby Coon can no mare ja anything bright and shiny than when ‘other t loves to fish, he isn’t like Filly | or Little Joe Otter, who «pend SINESS MAN GAINS 15 POUNDS TAKING TANLAG | ) | H. Ogden Says It Has Added Years to His Life And right then the Old Log gave a sudden lurch. | he can pase a good tinea! when he! sees it. He simply has got to have| Mt. It doemn’t make any difference | What it is, he has got to have it. | So when he saw this something gtit- | tering and *hining up at him from| the bottom of the tiny pool he for. | got all about fish First he plunged one arm in way | }up to the shoulder. It was of no |use at all, The shiny thing was too far out from the bank. He waded |in a little way, but still he couldn't |reach it. Jolly, round red Mr. sun jaoking down from the blue sky, laughed at Bobby Coon’s efforts, and when he lhughed the bright thing giittered more than ever, and the! moré it giittered the more Bobby | Coon wanted it } Robby mat down on the bank to study how he could get hie heart's | desire, for it seemed ta him now! that he wanted that shiny thing more than anything else in the! Presently he noticed an old} i anywhere | I thought I would give out} int before I could get there. | Hl anything like it. My ap- t a new startyand the indi-| began to leave me and 1) picking up in weight. And| org de a ares aad log, half in the water and half on T eat ever causes ine any |i? Mhore. Bobby's eyes brightened ‘The Pheumatiem has | Jf I get out on the end of that per. | red altogether and I never |@PS I can reach that shiny thing; 1| a pain of any kind. My nerves | bolleve I oan,” said he to himself Ng strong aa steel and I peep! Very cautiously he crawled out on ‘a top every night. Iam in per-|the old log. It wasn't a very big fect health and 1 have nothing but|!0 and it was smooth and very The highest recommendation tor | Very *llppery. As he got out toward Paniac.” | the end of it it began to sink lower Taniac is sold in Seattie by Rartell | 404 lower in the water by’e but he didn’t mind Téction of a special Tanlac represen. | that. He was right over that shiny tative —Advertisement. | thing now. Hanging to the old log ek ccaeesrveiee emcee | with his feet and one hand, he | reached down, down till the tips of hia fingers just touched the bright, shiny thing. And right 1 the old log gave a sudden lurch and, with a tremendous ap Bobby Coon, head fir Up on the bank Peter rit and Jimmy Skunk and Unc’ y Pow som shouted and danced and threw Up their hata! They had come along just in time to nee Bobby Coon crawl out on the old log. Then one of them had «lipped down and given the old log a push at just the right minute. | At first Bobby Coon was too mad to speak, but by the time he had} blown all the water out of his nome | and shaken it out of his ears and hin eyes, he bean to see the joke Resides, he didn’t know which of the three little acamps on the bank to blame, and be didn’t want to quarrel with all three. So presently he joined in the laugh, too. And |then, being in all over, ” nothing to prevent bright, shiny thing. What Why, nothing but a scrap Next sory: The Neatness of Bobby , in went NOW You Wink OF must somes vo ASK VT! ‘You've BEEN IN A REAS 1 ASK “OU ‘TO GO TO THE STORE YOU BARK AT ME KNOW | HAVE To PUT TH’ PEACE IN THiS | apn. MOUSE? | Ley | _ SUMMER OM, ACTWING = You KNOW PS TURE YEARS D-DAY Br Gotty! TH’ POOR THING, SHE MUST BE IN “TROUBLE: OTTO AUTO— TEMPER ALL DAY. JUST BECAUSE Away FOR TH’ | MUST HAVE { BAUS Ask It HOW OLD MOTHER 1S T “TANT THAT GUT NERY Time | SIT DOWN WITH THIS - BOOK You WANT ME TD Go OUT OR SOMETHING ua Tey pRU@ ~ YoU Purs | AND | q AWW fr STRANGE ‘ { ee-eR rs PARDON ME . WHATS TH’ TROUBLE? —By ALLMAN achieinas il 1 Don’ @eLieve I'm Dip You ee, Me CET WER GOAT ?-On BABY . ORE Beweve tr No MATTER “tue Ger S SPEAK WHAT Ir SAID!T Hee ABONGE “te it Was a Foolish Question to Ask. CERTAINLY, STLPID- DID You THINK | WANTED To ROL ‘EM HOME? GIMME A Box OF MOTH BALLS aa MAT IEWT So STRANGE, YOU WERE wou Your. urns DAY, AND Youre GRANDMA UNING AWAY, You HARDL \Wntw WEO! GRANDA, Tuer 1 CRIED AOE FOR AY LITTLE ALLOW TE TO}IS IN ‘ ASSIST YOU!) LONDON: HERES A | Wife St y; * | (tm Make This Bequest! He Bluffs Suicide BOSTON, April 30.~-When James| BOSTON, April 30.—William M. A. Woolson died he bequeathed a | Kadra, who attempted suicide sum for the building of a left wing|to scare his wife because she re to the Cambridge hospital, The | mained from home without account amount was not sufficient. His | ing for her absence, waa saved from widew died, March 27, and her will,| commitment to the Danvers Insane filed ‘recently, provided for making Asylum by hia wife, who says she up the deficit. Mra, Woolson left| stayed out nights to soare her hus $70,000 to public tions, ! band. WOMEN DYEING: EVERYTHING They use ‘‘Diamond Dyes’’ and Add Years of Wear to Old, Faded Garments—Really Fun! It’s fun to beat high clothes cost, fun to see faded, shabby apparel turn new, fun to add years of wear to worn ging: hams, house-drésses, aprons, blouses, skirts, sweaters, children’s coats, every- thing with ‘‘Diamond Dyes.”’ Don't worry about perfect Its, Just use “Diamond Dyes,” guaranteed to give a new, rich, fadoleas color to any material, whether wool or silk; linen, cotton or mixed goods, Directipn Book in package, Druggist has Colgr Card, 'NO RELIEF FROM 5° FOOD COST - + HIGH | ae |Crop Prices Up 23.3 Per| : | Cent in Twelve Months WASHIN pare for gloo | living |to the April 0 newse—the coat of t tumble soon, according rtment of agriculture. | Crop pr | than any time since the civil war, says the bureau of crop estimates, | Farmers are now being paid $324.10 for produce they sold in nor- |mal years for $100, The normal | year ts average year for 43 yea from 1 8 been st ince last January, Crop 1 ve increased 22.2 per cent since April, 1919. Meat prices are falling but the consumer is not benefiting, Prices to the farmer are now 10.9 | \|per cent LOWER than two years consumer is paying | 100 per cent MORE than in normal | | ago, altho the years, The falling off in exports resulted | in lower prices offered the farmers by the packers. ‘The decrease to ‘was made at the same time ata Pre. | joes were higher April 1) The inerease has | 5. eee ; |Wor bh 1 |on Boston ‘Gun Crew rs! | BOSTON, April 30.—One* hundry }and twenty policemen will recel Doesn't hurt! Lift touchy corns and | tnree practice sessions in maching) calluses right off with fingers |gun and riot gun firing in preparat | tion for any disturbances, All mem bers of this force are veterans @ |the World War, OVER-EATIN is the root of nearly all | 7] digestive evils. If your |” digestion is weak or out | of kilter, better eat less |, and use KI-MOIDS | the new aid to better } Apply a few drops of '‘Freezone’’ upon that old, bothersome corn. Instantly that corn stops hurting. Then shortly you lift it right off, root and all, without pain or soreness, Hard corns, soft corns, coms between the toes, and the hard skin calluses on bottom of fect Ltt right off—no bumbug! Tiny bottles of ““Freeuenc” cost but a few cons at drug sera > ey apne eanac any as eng == rns pee bat, I