The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 25, 1920, Page 11

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PAGE 11 WILOUR, Tas, Wilt. Be Your. Resy ‘Trip ovT ON “7e RAD ANO | WANT You To TRY AID MAK& GOOD ~ OF Course You KNow Wea You Go TY A HoTeL Yous. have To RteisTeR - WRITE YouR NAME Ano Tre Town bry tng Delay Ne NOTICE How er. nan ARG ON THe RESISTER. A FIVE-YEAR-OLD DETECTIVE py the Tall Man laughed, “The Duke of York thought he was the grandest tiger in the dungie. -*They had funny names for us, too. They named us according to our looks, They called me ‘Am Bquirk.’ Now what do you sup. pose that means?" “Brave Boy,” David guessed. “No, not ‘Brave Boy.’ Your time, Pegsy. Guess what ‘Am | Squirk’ means.” “Tm a nawfulty poor guesser,” said, “and Davie does! Jaugh at me when I guess wrong. | + You tell us, “Weill, it means ‘red head.’ ‘The children fooked at the beau: bronzy brown hair of the! Mah with its sprinkling of | | Bray and wondered, “Yes, it was red, all right,” he} ¢ them. “My little brother 4 was quite chunky, and they! him ‘Mang-yasuntin’ (fat | “We had great times with these boy friends of ours—used @© to their lodges and play by hour with them on rainy and slip back home just in for supper. | *Mother would say, ‘My, how! You children smell! You've been | dwn to the India huts all after. oon, haven't you? I wish you ‘would be content to stay at home ‘when it's too rainy to piay outside np school, You smell so fishy i x te whole house dim- @id make you smell Peggy wanted\to know. “Why everything it the In- eet ame . DVENTURES HE TWINS » THE QUARREL aN dian huts smelled fishy, dear. They made lights at night by burning the little candle fish; they cooked fish constantly over their open firds; they had fish of! on their brown bodies,~and drfed fish hanging everywhere, They could. n't help smelling of it. “We know a lot about the In- dians—good and bad. I recall once we had had rumors of trou- ble among the Clallums, and tho [ was only § years old, father told me about it, “Son,” he said, ‘I keep getting news here and there about trou. ble among the Clallums, Now you know you are getting to be a big boy and you'll have .to help me take care of mother and the babies. You've been with the In. dians a great deal and you know their tricks, Come up with me on the bi, 1 at to show you some- when we left the ny talked quietly to me as we walked on thru the dark, stilt woods “Present * "Listen he stopped anid. ‘What do you | hear? ‘I don't hear anything.” I sald, ‘except my heart beatin’ “Lie down,’ father told me, ‘with ear close against the ground, pee what you hear” ~"T quesa I hear lots of footsteps,’ 1 told Bim, ‘or else it's my heart ht father watched all I letened and letened, Bight and the next. And (hem when we thought we were mistaken the ope padded steaithily by our home, the Clallams stole safely down on our own Indiana and murdered @ whole camp while they slept. * treacherous you never could tall where they were me: ing to strike.” Rat THERES A FIRE ON OUR sTReetT [eR rocea C) yelled Floppy, hopping on one foot, and makingva for’ Muff's nose. _ Uf Nick had waited a little longer ‘ what would happen to the oad earth he was watching move sus ly away from the Meadow schoolhouse, instead of going make a report to Mr. Mole and he would have seen the Stop near a fiat stone, ground around quiver and ‘volcano were about to at once it cracked | ttle gray furry fig. into thé sunlight other most awfully. g00d to eat worms!” lole, reaching for anoth. mes nn Floppy Field-Mouse, but aid led Floppy, hopping on io) making a dive for “Worms are only good | Ro talle, Why don't) behind you?" And he| “You can’t dig with your old tail!” cfled Muff. “What's more, you can’t even dig with your claws.” “Yes,” sneered the mole boy, “to steal other fodks’ grain. worms are you eating? Are they yours?™ Thi was a facer, but Muff was quick to think. “No, but they're not Farmer Smith's either, and the corn is, Besides, I eat grubs an | that destroy hig corn, and—" he went on, showing hin teeth—“some day. when I grow up, I am going to eat! something else that destroys his| corn, too.” “Ha, ha! mocked Floppy. “How big do you think you'll grow, Mr. Walrus?” And the pummeling began all over Again. (Coprright, 1970, N. KA.) BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Une’ Billy Does Some Surprising Himself “we Unc’ Billy Possum, sitting in the dark beside Peter Rab- Bit, down among the alders that along the Laughing Brook. heard the -volce of Stickytoes Bs ‘Treetoad, he had thought just as Rabbit did, that Stickytoes was in an alder tree on the other of the Laugiting Brook. But QB w Enis L ov Cf mee | “SK \ s Une Billy Peered Up Thru the Alders. when he heard a whisper right over their heads and looked up to see Btickytoes himee!f, Unc’ Billy almost ¢huckied out loud. You can’t fool Uncle Billy, fio don't go fo’ to try! Ab knows yo’, yes, Ah knows yor— ‘Ah knows yo', Mistah Sly!” He enid that to himecit and quite his breath, for ali the time! 5 that Peter Rabbit and Stickytoes the | Treetoad were whispering together | Eine’ Billy Possum was stealing away | the alder bushes, Unc’ Billy soft-footed, oh, very soft-foot- @4, indeed, when he wants to be! You see, one must need to be very sott-footed to steal eggs in Farmer Bfown's henhouse. So Unc’ Billy stole away without making « sound, and when Peter Rabbit turned to; speak to him, there was no Unc’ Billy | there. Peter rubbed hia eyes and stared all around, this way and that way, but no sign of Unc’ Billy could he see. That so surprised Peter Rabbit that he feit queer all over. First there was the voice of Stickytoes, over on the other side of the Laugh- ing Brook, when all the time Sticky-| | toes wasn't there at all. Now, here Une’ Billy Possum had disappeared | IM AS NERVOUS AS A CAT To-Der 1S ELECTION Day AN’ I KNOW IM GONNA GET IT IN TH NECK FoR MAToR! PLIERS, ETC GIVES AVELLA SOME) (Cato onl HAT PHONE GRIP IN WIS WANDS: nt THE LAST WHE YEARS T All Peter Was Worried About Se va oust Hart BURNING VALUABLES IN wv GOCser Tmt UP AGAINS OF POUTICIANS; THEYLL STOP AT NOTHIN’ TO ELECT THEI MAN' THEY'LL PULL SOME PHONEY STUFF SURE AN’ TRY To STEAL THE ELECTION! YES- WELL TRY Your DAG (AND BEND AN EAR wow cou! DEVELOPED AGRIP LIKE awoes TUL COULD TAKE A PIECE OF | BERHAl PPE GH UNK? YOURE ALL EXcITEO! ‘ GAN- KNOCK-KNEED GRASSHOPPERS! + Weolts- Ko GRR-RAFF just as if the earth had swallowed | tai, a tail of feathers hanging down.|Civil War Veteran’s |Jimmie Wong Won't him up. n't any place for me!” said | Esa Bn Peter Rabbit, and off tie started for | the Green Meadows as fast as he could go, lipperty-lipperty-lip! All this time Unc’ Billy Possum had been crawling along without the tiniest sound. When he came to the Laughing Brook, he went up a way untii he found @ big tree with a| branch stretching clear across the) Laughing Brook. Billy could ha didn't feel Ike ‘imming that night, so he climbed up the big tree, out along the branch, let himself down by the tall and then dropped. | He was acrows the Laughing Brook | without even wetting his feet. Une’ Billy didn't waste any time. Just as soft-footed as before, he crept! along in the darkest shadowy until he was right under the alder tree from which the complaining voice of Stickytoes the Treetoad seemed to come. Unc’ Billy listened, and the longer he listened the broader grew the smile on Une’ Billy's shrewd face, “Thiet! Thief! Of course, Unc’ Thiet!" It certainly sounded for all the ¢ world like Sammy Jay's voice, and it was right over Une’ Billy's head. Une’ Billy peered up thru the alders, The leaves were so thick that he could not see very well, but what he did see was enough, It was a long fam across, but he| ran! | It wasn't Sammy Jay's tail, either ‘Doan yo'all think that yo’ all have joked enough?” asked Une’ | Billy, ‘trying hard to keep from ebuckling aloud. A cry of “Thief! stopped right in the middie, and two sharp eyes |looked down in surprise at Une'| | Billy | | : The Meeting of Two | | The man who failed to-decunre the nomination may have cause | to ree id the day after the election ‘Cured His RUPTURE! I wan badly ruptured while lifting a trunk several years ago. Doctors | said my only hope of cure was an operation. Trusses did me no good. Finally I cot hold of something that quickly and completely cured me. | Years have passed and the rupture has never returned, although I am/ doing hard work 4# © carpenter. There was no operation, no lost time, no trouble. I have nothing to but will give full infor withone operation, if you oe Eugene M. Pullen, Carpenter, 0-G' Marcellus Avenue, Manasquan, | J. Better cut out this notice and yw it to any others who are rup- ~you may save a life or at atop the misery of rupture and the worry danver of an” opera: | tion Heart Fails; Is Dead| Die of Auto Hurts Ten hours after he had been | Jimmie Wong, 24-year-old son of |wtricken with heart failure, Chris/one of Chinatown's best-known mer | Doyley, 79-year-old civil war veteran, | chants, was reported recovering in died at the Providence hospital last | Providente hospital Saturday from night. The body is at the Butter. | injuri inflicted when his auto worth establishment pending fu-| struck’ a telephone pole at 14th ave. neral arrangements. Is. and Walker st, Sunday night. . Sacrifice Sale at Storage Warehouse Disston’s Saws and Files -@ $2.55 ‘ 3.30 4.45 5.75 7.10 ndard sizes, from 2% feet to 14 feet 30 Inch Docking Saws 4-foot Cross Cut Saws 5-foot Cross Cut Saws 6-foot Crows Cut Saws . 7foot Felling Saws . Substantial quantities, all s Stock must be sold in 15 day Sale daily, 2 to 5 p.m, W. B. FOGH Care Jordan Terminal, PHONE MAIN 3330 1248-50 First Avenue South Be sure you are right, then hold | the stakes while the other fellows det. ‘Lungs Weak? Generous Offer to Tubercu- |losis Sufferers of Trial of SANOSIN SANOLEUM Em- bracing Europe’s Remarkable | Expectorant, SANOSIN | Noted medical setentiste—Doctors Dan- ellus, Sommerfield, Wolff, Noel; Gauthier, Wasors—declare SANOSIN most valuable treatment for Pulmonary ailments, Feltx Wolff, court physician, director of the | Sanitartum for Consumptives in Retbolds- ermany, highly recommends. tt has been officially recommend- Jed to the Berlin Medical Association. [Dr C, W. A. Baners, land, declares it a “Moral obligation to | make BANOSIN known to the whole hu- man race.” American sufferers, rich or | poor, can une this remarkable home treat~ ment that has met with su Burope, SANOSIN 8ANO signed to preduce calm, | without morphium or similar dead drugs, and toring almost immediate re- |\tet from coughing, blood spitting and night #weats, SANOSIN SANOLEUM tn Jan inexpensive home treatment of gem- » merit, and ia proving a blessing all suffering from — tuberculosis, ehitts, asthma, whoop: FREE ROOK explaining thin . n46, lawow' Riis 30 SOMA UNPORTUNATE G.. A. R. Man Recovers) PROPOSALS WILL BE B® From Auto Smashup Hurd, past department commander of the G. A. R., was con- valescing at his home, 4147 12th ave, from tnjuries sustained ten days ago in an auto accident in We- He was on his way to chureh when the accident occurred. Fred H. N. EB, natchee. CEIVED by the Bureau oe Supple and Accounts, Na BEC ent, Washington, D. oh * until lock a. m,, October 8, 1920, for deliver: ine bakery proofers to the Navy Yard, Puget Sound, Wash. for proposals to the Suset he ficer, Navy Yard, Wash. of to the Buea ot lies and Accounts. UBL, Gowan, Paymaster General 3 the Navy. TABLETS OR LI SOLD EVERYW! uD RE “IT SAVED MY LIFE” The Feeling Tribute of d Woman to PE-RU-NA READ HER LETTER—IT WILL DO YOU GOOD “Pe-ru-na has been @ Godsend to me. T fect sate tm saying that it saved-my Nfe, I was all run down and miserable when I commenced taking Pe-ru- na, but am on the road to recovery now. I can not thank you too much, MRS. CHARLES ANSPAUGH, R. F. D. No. 7, Lagrange, Indiana, A letter Hike this brings hop the promise of health to every sick and sul haps you know what it means Gellee a misery, avery movement an effort, stoniach doranged, pains in the head, back and loins moat of the time, nerves raw and quivering—not @ moment dayvor night free from suffering. Do as Mrs, Anspaugh did. Take Pe-ry:na, Don't wait, but start right away!

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