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“ | | St 1S SAYS Hare, IT MAY BE NeCESSARN IN CASE OF 1DBETIFICATION To 6we Ask A WOMAN PNOUGH QUESTIONS TI 4 } Your APPARBALT WeIGKY AND APPAREALY Wed SHE G0ES To ResisTER, fg PRETTY PERSONAL WITH THEIR 4 QUESTIONS ON ‘THIS REGISTRATION! ar. pate EES Page 156 INDIAN FEAR wes PRGGY and David bad heard the very last of the lit- tle cow story and Mother dear had honked the horn again and again and had finally gone to get them, they went home You see, Mra Polly and Mrs. Nancy together, both with whole bookfuls of “I remembers" which ever were written down, were al- Most too good to leave, Pegsy said: “I wish we just could stay a week and not stop a Bit, Just listen and listen.” And David said; “I wish I knew who that Seattle man is who shook | the tree, I'l bet he would know some peachy stories.” And that’s how David happened to wet this story; that is, he want: ed so much to know who the nmn Was that he telephoned Mra. Polly, and when he found out, he fairly shouted, for the man was a] good friend of Daddy's, and} David knew his little boy, and ‘everything. ‘The man began like this— “Did I do that? Haj ha! ha! Well, I don't remember it, but I Probably did if she said I did, Anybody ever tell you boys about the young Indian the tree fel! on? ‘That was a Whidby Island tale I hear; it happened when I . their roots deep into the soll fell with their long trunks blocking trails and thelr proud branches on the ground among the ferns, “Also the lower branches of the big trees were blown down in great numbers so that the forest was a danger-filled place. “It happened that on an evening in this autumn @ young Indian failed to come back to his lodge. When his father returned with the other men his mother said “"Tal.Bob does not return, Barly he left, and he sald that at noon-sun he would return, for I had prepared for him a pot of tukutehee, and I fear’ “The men talked awhile among themselves and then started out. “The mother stayed in the hut and tended the fire and stirred the lukutchee, which all day she had kept hot for her boy. “But it grew dark, and still they didn't come, and when at last she heard them and ran to see what they had found, she saw them bearing the bedy of her son on thelr shoulders. “It was the wind,’ they told her, ‘the wind in the trees, and the limb was heavy. him lying where he fell; found him, and bis spirit was quite gone” “And they gathered together all his belongings and they burned them. They do not wait. (To Be Continued) The fairy schoolmaster hammered on his desk (forgetting it was the magical mushroom) and the school came to were to walk into the school you'd prob ably be very much surprised at the nds of “seats” for the chil- Bat ‘was hanging by a stick; Orrie Owl, in a cozy hole in the tree; Fred k Frog was squatting in a cool 4 ; Sar’ Ann Spider was loung Ye comfortably tn her web, with an i ted eye on Buddie Blue Bot- —. the Mole and Mouse chil- were sitting with one foot in a |} ‘convenient hole, ready to follow with the rest of themselves if Smarty Skunk or Wisp Weasel got hungry while they were passing the slates. The rest of the children were sit- ting up obediently on stones of Warious shapes and sizes, but you may imagine that Greenle Grass hopper’s seat in nowise resembled the one occupied by fat Wally, Wood- chuck. Sammie Snake, jr, was in his element, curled up like a watch- | spring, on top of a nice flat rock, ‘wondering how far hetould stretch the teacher's back was turned, | ala and {tf Terry Toad, studying bis spelling, tasted ag good as he looked. Mr. Scribble Seratch, the fairy | schoolmaster, hammered on his desk | forgetting that it was the Magical | Mushroom) and the school came to | order. | “We'll now have reading,” be an- | Nounced. | Nancy was busfly making a dunce leap, and Nick was out hunting up the Bunpy girls, who were away that day. Everything was very | quiet, except for the rustling of the pages, as the pupils bunted the | place. “Don't thumb over your lea: | that way,” sald Scribble Scratch, bends them and makes dogears” | Everybody shivered and looked | toward the door, “Sport Squirrel,” went on the master, “please read where it says, ‘I ste a cat'” Everybody jumped again. “Oh,” piped Floppy Field Mouse with a start. “This—this is no place for me.” | "Copyright, 1920, N. FA) i fi re 4 BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Sammy Jay Sits Up All Night IAMMY JAY eat in the dark and shivered, Sammy -was lonely, More lonely than he had ever sup- anybody could be. And to tell 4 truth, Sammy was scared. Yes, gir; that was just the way Sammy Jay felt—scared. Every time a leaf Sammy jumped almost out thoes. His heart went pita pit-apat, pitapat He could it himself; at least, he thought could, and it seemed to him that if Hooty the Owl should happen to come along, he would surely hear ft. You. see, it was the first time in all his life that Sammy Jay had not gone to #leep just as soon as jolly, found, red Mr. Sun had pulled his foxy nightcap om and gone to bed be- hind the purple hills. But tonight Sammy sat in the darkest, thickest part of # big pine tree, and kept his eyes to keep from going to sleep. He had made up his mind that he wouldn't go to sleep at all that night, no matter how lonely and ffightened he might be. He just Would keep his eyes and his ears open, What was he doing it for? Why, cause all the little meadow and f people insisted that every Right lately Sammy Jay had spent a reat part of his time screaming in ‘the harsh, unpleasant way he does during the day, and some of them were very cross, because they said that b> waked them when they want 4 to sleep, Now, Sammy knew bet- He never in his life had “sereamed in the night, unless—w fanless he did it in his sleep and didn't know it. So he had made up mind to keep awake all of this ht and see if in the morning any one would say that he had waked them up. He had watched the black shadows ereep thru the green forest and blacker and blacker, Zhe biacker they grew, the lonesomer he became, By and by it was so dark that he couldn't see anything at all, | and every little noine made him| shiver, It is easy to be brave in| daylight, but In the dark, when you! cannot see a thing, every little sound | seoms twice as loud as it really is, and gives you such a creepy, creepy feeling. Sammy Jay had it now, He “Whoo-hoo-hoo, Whoo-hoo!” felt so creepy that It seemed an if he would craw! right out of his skin. He kept saying over and over to himseif: “There's nothing to be afraid of. There's nothing to be afraid of. I'm just ag safe as if I was fast asleep.” But still he shiv. | ered and shook. By and by, looking up thru the top of the big pine tree, he saw the little stars come out one by one. They all seemed to be looking right down at him and winking at him in the jolliest way, Somehow, he didn’t feel quite so lonely then, and he tried to wink back, Then littie, soft silvery bare of light began to creep iy ucheduled ta begin October diy ANSELM, COLL | memes, | ML SAN! WEDLOCKED | i PA] They're CeRTAMIN Gone “TO | } * Pool” 1 Cleland— + | TLUCTELL You OTD+ EM GO DAS GAN AD-WORY, L COULD BIT thrn the branches of the trees and along the ground, ‘They were moonbeamns, and Sammy could #6 just a little, a very little, He began to feel better. “Whoo0-hoo-hoo, whooo-hoo! It was & terrible sound, fierce and hungry. Sammy Jay nearly fel) from hig pereh, He opened his mouth to scream with fright, Then he remem bered just in time and closed it with- out a sound. It was the hunting cry of Hooty the Owl. Sammy Jay sat huddled in @ lttle forlorn, shivering heap while twice more that fierce ery rang thru the Green Forest. ‘Then a shadow floated over the big pine tree. Hooty the Owl had flown away without seeing him, and Sammy breathed easier. Next Story: Sammy Is Glad He Sat Up All ht. ‘Seattle May Get in Districtofficers of the railway jmall service have declared an effort will probably be made to link Seattle |with the New YorkSan Francisco air mail route now under operation. The tentative plans provide for a function point at Salt Lake Clty. The Victoria Seattle air mail service on Air Mail Service| The lower the gas ts turned the brighter it seems for lovers. RADIUM AT LAST OREN THE DOOR OF Wi? nt to Get ite for lit- Cy Why thie and’ wonderfully nuedreliet to. 86 Rheumatism, , Neuralgia, Well \« How almost new element many su Sciatica, Nervou Prossure and nen's Radio-Act and night, rece tive Rays con system, causiny tion, overe throwing off ing the timmy mal conditi you ae the appliance ia y do but wear it. No and the most it the appliance sf ) reasonable that it bgbr. 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