The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 23, 1920, Page 11

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\ ar OV Page Sennennanenmmemenmeenl so oa and bleeding, the miser lay at the bottom of the icy} crag. “The storm howled ahd raged about him, on to his precious shells but he was hanging inky dark and he was sore and burt, but he staggered up and tried to walk against the storm. “Tle heard a kind of other roar, too, inside the storm, and he shud. dered. "Tis the voice of Tam anous,, he maid, ‘an angry Tam anous.’ He knew that Tamanous was not his friend any longer, “The blackness grew deeper and deeper; whenever he tried to move the wind caught him and tossed him about like a leaf, and the alr was full of screeching, howling voices, as if Tamanous had Yolces, ‘Ha! ha! they jeered, ‘h ha! Hiaqual Ha! ha! har “The laughter grew shriller and more frightening every minute and the darkness blacker till it seemed as if it could never be Ught again. “The old man's teeth chattered and he ¢ b 1 will give him & great said; “Tamanous Wishes a And bh handful of shells into all that he carried i hand. “At that the storm stopped a/ minute and be could hear otters! puffing around him, but they were invisible. “Then | the storm started up OF After Dr. Mink had taken his seat again beside the other visitors in the Meadow Grove school after curing Markie Muskrat, the school had reading. Mr. Scribble Scratch, the | fairy schoolmaster, called on Bertie | Bat first. Now Bertie ta queer, He has to fy all the time or else hang up| by his feet, and, as you can't read | flying, Bertie had (to read hanging. | And, being upside down, he had to/| _Tead upside down. This is what;! only if you wish to make any sense) out of it you will have to do the} , @ame as Bertie did. te .punosd om OF Sze oN Afmee trey pay | i ‘Jaayu ous uy humae és Sa%q pur yoe sumeq onary, mes, and he waa very much obliged | “puns o8 Auydoop soy GoM eyL! “punos | fem tomo om sy Au I ing suryo fy 07 dn seutoo Karmen ey TL | q ‘we pro uu | Odwor TI Sms ue dn ety og | “Wl PUY INO Wem oy) Judes say ‘om 7 BY THORNTON Striped Chipmunk Has More Fun Hipperty, hopperty, one, two, three! What do you think becomes of me? ITRIPED CHIPMUNK would | shout this in his shrillest voice. Then he would vanish from sight all| in th wink of an eye. You couldn't) tell where he went to, At least, Hap py Jack the Gray Squirre} couldn't, and his eyes are sharper than youre or mine, Happy Jack was spying. | He was watching Striped Chipmunk know it, At least, he thought he w But really he wasn't, Those sh twinkling eyes of Striped Chipmun! seo everything, You know, he is| such @ very litte fellow that he tas} to he very wide awake to keep out | of danger. * | And be is wide awake, Oh, my,| yen, indesd! When he is awake, and that is every minute of the day, he is the widest awake little fellow you ever did see. He had seen! Happy Jack the very firwt thing, and | : he had gnessed right away that 5 i Happy Jack was spying on him #o aa| i r to find out if he had any of the big, | ¥ fat nuts that Happy Jack had | knocked down from the tall hickory tree when he had quarreled with his cousin, Chatterer the Red Squirrel, in the top of It. Now, Striped Chip | munk had all of those fat nuts safely | hidden. in his splendid new store house, but he didn’t intend to let Happy Jack know it, So he Just pre-| tended not to see Happy Jack or to know that he wag anywhere near, | but acted ae if he was just going! about his own business, Really, he! was just having the best time ever | fooling Happy Jack. ‘The corn Ix ripe: the nuta do tall; ‘Acorns ate aweat and plump; | I goon wit ve my storehouse fal Inside the hollow stump. Striped Chipmunk sang this just! as If no ong was anywhere near ‘and! WHAT THE MISER LEARNED It was! , again worse than ever; louder and|too greedy, and so they both harsher and crueler; and demon | found,out that you mustn't be sel hands seemed to grab at his! fieh—it won't work!” wake ADVENTURES THE TWINS Otive Roberts Barton - BERTIE BAT’S PIECE Bertie had to read hanging. Jone thing he Goattle » 2: 1 Cleland _+ 189 strings of shells and the demon otters beat him with™ paws and tore at bis right hand and his belt “He couldn't stand tt. “String after atring he Sung ay wnt! he had just one string left He clung to tt a long time, but the noise and the beatings and the laughing was so awful that at threw that tnto the storm, to the ground last he then he senk unconscious too I guess he must have slept a tong time of something, but when he waked there Skal-ki, the bluejay, and he*was at the very spot he started from. He was hungry as everything and felt for bis bag of kamas, but” the bag was gone and a whole bed of kamas grew beside him. “He washed some and ate, Then he started to walk, but he was old and he creaked and he felt queer and then when he came near his he na squaw-all up to beat o wae singing lodge wed and pe “*Your old man is down! down! down" shouted the wise old man. “Then they talked ft all over and «he was quite rich from work ing and he poor from being paw 428uny 9.04 yy fee euog “uy 1 Suyqovea ere ovum arms om iv ‘one ou) Raw syres oy SY oko THOLd BI SKU og BOW, ‘eaop Ire «1 Sup oa TIN Pd Fup wng “one oo) TA NVOe pUw ep Kou OFF “oeds 204,18 31q © ONT seaTgR puy 143; 7” yNo FeUIOD % GoqM Iq MysepuOm w sor ‘9UNE 40 TadyY 40 sequieyteg a] ‘uoou oy) #| Fury) e1qwyseMe y,, After he had finished reading. Mr Chuck said he never understood be fore why the moon was full some. for telling him. But there was still didn’t know. Why was it that Mr. Moon was just as thin on his last quarter as he was on his first? What was the use of him spending any money at all? then said that vaan't in the story. (Copyright, 1920, o) Re rE nN he was singing just for joy. of course, Happy Jack heard it and he grinned to himeeilf. “So your storehouse ts In a hol. low stump, my smart little o! said Happy Jack to himeeit. that’s the case, I'll soon find it.” Striped Chipmunk scurried along, and now he took pains to always keep in sight. Happy Jack followed aain'* mtd “It's his storehouse, sure enough,” said Happy Jack. right cheek. Then he picked up an- other and put that In the pocket in hig left cheek. Then he crowded an other into each, and his face wan swelled out so that you would hardly have guessed that it was Striped Chipmunk if yop had chanced to meet him. My, my, he was a funny sight! Happy Jack grinnéd again as he watched, partly because striped Chipmunk looked #o funny, and part- ly because he knew that if Striped Chipmunk waa going to eat the acorns right away he woulda’t stuft _ WILL ROGE: LU Krrcweu! “ HEY CLARKE! ARE YOU GONNA POWDER Your NOSE ALL NIGHT? | them into the pockets In his cheeks. ) But he had done this very thing, gnd #0 he must be going to take them to his storehouse. Off scamperea Striped Chipmunk, and alter him stole Happy Jack, his | eyes shining with excitement. Pretty noon he saw an old stump which | it must be hollow. | without letting Striped Chipmunk | Striped Chipmunk picked up a plump Happy Jack grinned more than ever | acorn and put in the pocket in his as looked as if he carefully hid himself and | watched. Striped Chipmunk scram | bled up on the old etump, looked this way and that way as if to be sure than ho one was Watching him and then, with a flirt of his funny lit tle darted in a little He was gone a |} ime, but by and by out he pope looked this way and that way, then scampered off in the direc from which he had come. Hapy Jack didh't try to follow him. He waited until he was sure that Striped Chipmunk was out of sight and hear tail, orway he RS (HIMSELF )— fe \ “Y ao nowdy bees Ler e) i Tom, o1iwa's Beau 1S NOY COMME To THE hovse TONKHT 30 You Won'Y HAVE TO SIT IA “THE HOWDY = BILL. = HOW = Weer \ SA SOUTH SEA ing and then be walked over to the old stump. ‘Ite hf atorehouse, sure enough,” | said Happy Jack Next ste Happy Jack Squirrel Turns Burglar, 8. A, WEER A. B STEWART, vice president of the Union National bank, is reported |improving after an operation Thurs for ab ances for recovery are good, Jominal lay Office mbin St, THE SEATTLE STAR On, ALL MaHT Sweer Hear! How ARe You? war 010 You Do Toony Wouey ? i tMovertr Agour You Ali DAY - Hone THE ECONOTUC COND/TIONS IN WILL PROBASLY BORE YO); 30 TAKE CARE WOT TO YAWN Of (Cutter to Talk on cussed by H. C. (Drawings by Grove) ih pas Yoy 1D? ST? on Yu Dear! “THE \SLANDS: (T : BE VERY / WOMAN IS | CCnerer Ss wrHerrr \ A \ 5 \ 7 Ute MIS UIREAMS LiSTes , howeY BUNCH, | BAKED A CAke Topay! | WawreD “To see IF | QLD - AP tr came our Jusr Fae! ML SAVE You A piece! OW, Quer Nov WHAT MAKES PEOPLE DEVELOPE MENTALITY; AN’ THATS) WHAT You NEED! H's GOING TO & FOR A CONE = CLAIM WIBAUD KICKED OUT OF BED — OG Ove oF Your Kino # kuow Berrer. lean} THAT! Yes You bo. NO! toe ue Suen. TIME T TELL You Tuer Nou CAN'T HAVE. A DENKY! y DRy, GUT The soldier bonue bill will be dis. Cutlgg, adjutant of the Eimer J. Noble post, American! under the auspices of the Seahurst Legion, at a voters’ meeting in Sen- Soldier Bonus Bill erst park Tuesday at 2:00 p. Park Minute Women. + Relief EEP JT IN THE Hi if teal now ht you t OUSE <3 Sesion, wlohe DONT WORRY ABOUT ME ft’ FULLY PREPARED For A DRY EVENING!! Whic ealing Thousanft dat BD trouble: WHOLE THING 1% Aly AUVERTISMart Por “win OdNosre An OLD Jousee | 1 Yes Youare! Ho, Dod Hascup Yer! I'VE GOTA 7 LoT oF ‘Twnias |) WAT TO Tak To You ‘DEAR! I'rt GOIN’ —' Cured His R I wadpbadly rupturéd whil & trunk\geveral years agg said my Wnly hope of peration\ Trusses did | Finally 1 hold of quickly and& comple! Years bi |has neve: jdoing hard There was ho timé, no trou nu- De © Nol but wil uit inform about how thg r Trial) (oe y | 990-4" J. ve f may operatio’ ne M. Pull Foellus Avenue, ter cut out this a co if you Cal Sat, nt toasts Which E Boie qui p we coala| OY, up and ills 80 liable to ‘Wrom Pascoe yr aes ise! wi you q 4 or etouto for a. onde ih druggist’

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